To Die For (20 page)

Read To Die For Online

Authors: Phillip Hunter

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Thrillers, #Suspense

BOOK: To Die For
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I saw the car as we neared Browne’s. It was opposite his house, too obvious to be law or Cole.

Browne and the girl carried on, not aware of anything, but I slowed my pace and crossed the street and halted by a bus stop, dumping the shopping bags on the seat, using the shelter to conceal myself as much as possible. I turned once and saw that Browne was looking around for me, slowing up. When he saw me, I glanced at the car and he got it. He switched the shopping to one hand, took a hold of the girl’s hand and carried on towards his house.

I saw a man get out of the passenger side. He was tall and thin and young, maybe late twenties. Then I saw the driver’s door open and I knew what was going on. A woman stepped out. It was that woman, Sue, that fucking nosy posh bint who worked at the old people’s home.

‘Doctor,’ she called out, waving her arm above her head as if he was a mile away.

When the girl saw her, she stopped and tugged on Browne’s hand and he leaned down and said something to her. I watched them walk towards the woman, who smiled at the girl and said something to Browne, introducing the man next to her. He smiled at them both, but there was something shifty about him, a tension in his body that his smile couldn’t hide. The woman pointed to Browne’s house and they all went inside. I picked up the shopping bags and walked off around the block.

By the time I got back, the car was gone. It was cold, but I was sweating with the effort of carrying all that fucking shopping and my right arm was about to drop off. I don’t know why I hadn’t dumped everything in the nearest bin. It never even occurred to me.

Browne let me in, blowing his cheeks out.

‘What did she want?’ I said as he closed the door.

‘To talk to me about Kid,’ he said, walking down the hall towards the kitchen.

I dropped the shopping by the front door and followed him.

‘Why?’

‘I told you,’ he said, as he sat down at the table and broke the seal on the Scotch, ‘she’s a damned nosy cow, wants to know everyone’s business, thinks she can sort everyone out.’

He poured a large Scotch and gulped half of it down. I stood by the table. For a moment it moved away from me, it all moved away, the table, the room, Browne and all.

‘What’s that got to do with the girl?’ I managed to say.

‘She said she was concerned for her well-being. Said it wasn’t a fit place for a child. I had to agree with her. She intimated that I had a drink problem. Bloody nerve. And she didn’t like you either. Told me a child shouldn’t be exposed to... well – ’

‘Thugs.’

‘More or less. Frankly. She said she’d formed the impression that Kid was becoming unsuitably influenced by such company.’

I heard the words he said, but they didn’t connect with any meaning. The room shifted again, I felt clammy.

‘Huh?’

‘You remember Kid told her she’d shot you.’

‘Right.’

My head started to swim around.

‘What’s wrong?’ Browne said.

‘Nothing. Who was the bloke?’

‘Her nephew. Apparently volunteers at a church in Croydon, Saint something or other.’

‘What did he want?’

‘Are you sure you’re all right? You don’t look very good. Is it your head?’

‘What did he want? The nephew.’

‘I don’t think he wanted anything. I think she just dragged him along. He didn’t seem happy about it. Poor bugger. Anyway, I told her I’d bring Kid to church next Sunday. I think that’s all she wanted to hear, frankly.’

‘Did they talk to the girl?’

‘Kid, for God’s sake. Her name’s Kid.’

‘Did they talk to her?’

‘They tried but she clammed up.’

‘Did she say anything? Anything at all?’

‘She asked for you.’

‘Me?’

‘I told her you weren’t here. She went up to her room. Now sit down, before you bloody fall.’

I slumped into the seat, sweat clinging to my body. Browne got up and filled a mug with water and slid it along to me.

‘Stay put. I’ll get us something to eat. You’ve overdone it. Don’t worry about Sue. I can handle her if I have to.’

With that he downed the rest of his drink and headed upstairs. I heard him wander about, go into the girl’s bedroom, come out, call her name, call it again. Then I heard nothing for a while. When I opened my eyes, Browne was in the kitchen again, by the back door. He was closing it.

‘Did you open this?’ he said. ‘This door. It was unlocked. Did you open it?’

It took me a few seconds to realize what he was saying. It took me a few seconds more to understand what he meant.

‘Where is she?’ I said.

‘I don’t know. I can’t find her. Joe, did you unlock this door?’

‘No. Did you see her go upstairs?’

‘I...’

He ran his hand through his hair, panic in his eyes.

‘How was she when the woman was here?’ I said.

‘She... she was scared, kept pulling on my hand, asking me not to let them take her back.’

‘Back? Back where?’

‘How the bloody hell do I know? Damn it.’

He burst into the garden. I could hear him bashing about with the bins, calling her name. I stood and the room spun. Had the girl come past me when I was out? I didn’t think so. The back door was unlocked, but that might have been Browne’s fault. He often forgot to lock it. I leaned forward and put my hands on the tabletop to steady myself. I had to think. ‘Back,’ she’d said. She’d asked Browne not to let them take her back. Back where? She’d been scared like that the first time that woman had called. Why? What was she scared of?

And if she’d run, hidden, where had she gone? Where would she go? I think I knew. I turned and staggered out of the kitchen and up stairs that twisted before me so that I had to stop and fall to my knees and hold on with all my strength.

When I got to her room, I went straight to the cupboard. I swung it open. There she was, curled up tightly, her knees up to her chin, just like she was when I’d found her in Dalston. Her arms were wrapped around her legs, her eyes were squeezed shut.

I put my hand out and touched her on the shoulder and she flinched. Then I heard a noise behind me. I straightened up.

‘Is she okay?’ Browne said.

My head spun and for a moment I couldn’t remember what I was supposed to do. There were dead men downstairs and here was a girl and she had a gun. And then I remembered and I reached out again.

‘No,’ she said.

‘There’s something wrong,’ Browne said. ‘She’s shaking.’

‘Hey,’ I said.

I grabbed her by the shoulder. She threw her hands up and pressed them against her ears.

‘No,’ she said.

‘She was in a cupboard when you found her,’ Browne said.

‘Hey.’

‘Christ, Joe. Leave her alone, man. Can’t you see she’s reliving it?’

Reliving it, reliving the past, stuck in it. Weren’t we all?

‘Good.’

‘Good? You bloody heartless bastard.’

He tried to push me away, but he couldn’t shift me.

‘If she’s reliving it, I can get some answers.’

‘Damn your answers.’

‘I need to know what scared her.’

‘You’re bloody scaring her.’

‘People are trying to kill me.’

‘Aye, and good luck to them. People are trying to kill you and you’re trying to kill Kid.’

‘I want answers,’ I said, knowing there was something wrong with that, with me, with what I was doing.

‘You don’t want answers. You want to vent your fury, your wrath, like some god who destroys everything, innocent and guilty, anything to serve your will.’

‘You don’t know what you’re talking about,’ I said, but his words were catching somewhere.

Now he was trying to shut the cupboard door, his face dripped sweat.

‘For God’s sake,’ he said.

‘What is it?’ I said to her. ‘What can you hear?’

‘It goes bang.’

‘Bangs? Shots? You heard the shots? Did you see the ones who fired?’

Browne had given up with the door and was pulling at my right arm, trying with all his weight to shift me.

‘You’ve lost control,’ he was saying. ‘You’ve been used and you don’t like it. Do you, Joe? You don’t like being weak and powerless.’

I grabbed her hand and pulled it from her ear.

‘Joe,’ Browne shouted. ‘Joe.’

‘Did you see the shooting?’ I said to the girl, throwing Browne off.

‘It went bang,’ she said. She wasn’t answering me, she was just talking.

Browne was right, she was reliving it. I don’t think she even knew we were there. Something had scared her and she’d gone to a safe place.

‘Hey,’ I said. ‘Hey.’

She screamed and I realized I was shaking her arm, shaking her whole body. My hand gripped the thin black wrist and I knew I could break it with a twist. She was still screaming. Well, her face was screaming, but I couldn’t hear the sound of it.

Then something moved inside my head and the room shifted an inch and I looked around and it seemed like I didn’t know this place. It was cold and dark and I couldn’t understand where I was, and when, and that emptiness opened up inside me. I looked for Browne, but he wasn’t there and it was just me and the girl and we were like we’d been before, and I started thinking about the money I was supposed to get, about the money and the bodies downstairs and Cole and Paget after me. Seemed like the more I moved forwards, the more I got sucked back. Always back.

I had to remember that I was at Browne’s, but Browne was gone and I swayed for a moment.

Then I saw her, and her eyes snapped open and widened and she held her hand out to me and I thought, Christ, it’s happening again.

I felt the splintering pain run through my shoulder, into my arm and I was back in Dalston, and she’d just shot me and Beckett was sitting downstairs with a hole in his head. And I couldn’t escape.

Then something stung me and the floor came up and hit me. Again. I was getting to know that floor pretty well. We were old friends.

I opened my eyes a crack and saw smoke everywhere.

‘You must be getting old, Joe,’ Browne’s voice said from a long way off.

I opened my eyes wider. The smoke cleared; the blurring faded; shapes became clearer. Browne sat on a chair and looked down at me. I moved my head a little and saw the girl on the bed, legs dangling, watching me, her hands resting in her lap. I half expected to see a gun pointed at me.

I hauled myself up slowly, resting on my side for a moment.

‘Yeah,’ I said.

‘First you get floored by a small girl, then by an old man.’

I stood, sat on the bed, next to the girl, my weight pushing the mattress down so that she ended up sliding towards me. She didn’t move, except to kick her feet a bit. My head felt like it was packed in lead.

‘What did you do to me?’ I said to Browne.

‘Gave you a shot. Knocked you out. Had no choice.’

‘My arm.’

‘Yes,’ he said. ‘Sorry about that. I had to do something to get you away from Kid.’

‘Right.’

‘I’m afraid I opened the wound. But I’ve restitched it.’

‘What did you do?’

He raised his thumb.

‘Stuck this in it,’ he said. ‘Sorry. It must’ve hurt like a bugger.’

‘Yeah.’

‘Yes, well, you’ve only yourself to blame, you know.’

The girl said, ‘Bugger.’

‘Don’t say that, darling,’ Browne said.

‘Yeah,’ I said.

‘What happened to you? Do you remember? You were acting like a madman. Attacking a small girl, for God’s sake.’

‘I don’t know what happened.’

‘Know what I think? I think you had a panic attack.’

‘What?’

‘I’m serious. You were looking around you as if you didn’t know where you were.’

‘I didn’t.’

‘Your head?’

‘Yeah. I... got confused.’

‘You panicked.’

‘Maybe.’

Browne sighed, reached down to his bag, opened it and then paused and closed it again.

‘Do you know what kind of damage you could have done?’

‘I’m all right.’

‘Not you, you bloody fool. I mean her. Kid. Know what kind of damage you could have done her?’

I looked at the girl.

‘What did you mean, bangs?’

‘Leave her,’ Browne said.

‘You heard the gunshots?’

‘Leave her.’

‘Bugger,’ the girl said.

‘Yeah,’ I said. ‘Right.’

We sat there for a while like that, Browne in the chair, me and the girl on the bed, side by side, her leaning into me, staring vacantly at the wall. I made to get up once, but Browne snapped a stern look at me and I carried on sitting there until the girl fell asleep, then Browne carried her to her bed.

She came down a few hours later, when we were watching an international game on TV. She rubbed her eyes and looked at us, then at the TV. She sat on the floor, cross-legged, and watched England getting hammered and it was like the whole thing a bit earlier had never happened. She didn’t mention her fear of being taken away; she didn’t mention that bloody woman. She didn’t look at me as if I’d attacked her.

Browne told me later that he thought the girl probably hadn’t even known we’d been there. He tried to explain it to me, what had happened to her. She’d had a flashback, as he called it.

‘I think she’s suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder,’ he said, ‘and she reverted to that moment of fear she’d had in that house in Dalston. Think of it like this: when she was scared back then, what did she do? She hid in a cupboard. And then, when she thought Sue had come to take her away, she got scared again – which is understandable, really, when you think of the kinds of places she must’ve ended up previously. So, she thought she was being carted off somewhere and panicked and hid in the cupboard. Then, in a kind of mental reversion, she was back in that house in Dalston with those killers downstairs. She’d gone back in time, you see? She was reliving the past. Do you see?’

Reliving the past. Yes, I did see.

‘And you,’ Browne said, ‘you were back there with her, weren’t you? For a moment, at least. You reverted as she did. In fact, it was probably her actions that caused your own reactions. That and your battered brain. You know, sad to say, I’m probably the sanest one in this house.’ He looked down at his old hands. ‘Aye, sad to say.’

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