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    I Will Make You Pay (ARC)

    Page 8
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      He blushes and finishes the last of his drink. ‘I wouldn’t

      normally have taken it, Mel, but she seems nice – this

      Alice. And these kinds of cases are so frustrating all round.

      We both know there’s not much we can really do without

      surveillance. I’ve said I won’t play bodyguard per se, but I’m happy to do twenty-four-hour surveillance once a week.’

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      I Will Make You Pay

      Melanie lets out a long sigh. ‘OK. Well, strictly be-

      tween us, I’m very happy you’re working on this too,

      because we both know I’m highly unlikely to get the

      manpower to do much unless things escalate. Forensics

      have found nothing so far, so our guy clearly knows what

      he’s doing. I’m a bit worried about the mother, actually.

      Whether she’s genuinely some kind of target too and we’re

      missing something. Or whether this guy just referenced

      her to wind Alice up some more. We’re checking the

      finances. Who would gain if the mother comes to harm.’

      ‘So what’s the security at the mother’s nursing home

      like?’

      ‘Not bad at all. They’ve got cameras and good door

      security. I’m sending uniformed round once a day to keep

      the pressure on them. But their protocols seem good.’

      She pauses. ‘Might be worth you popping by to double-

      check; make sure they don’t just let you sweet-talk your

      way in. If you have time.’

      ‘Good idea. I’ll do that.’ Matthew then lets out a long

      huff of air and stares into Mel’s eyes.

      ‘Are you thinking about the Rachel Allen case, Mel?’

      She nods.

      ‘Yeah. Me too.’

      When they were in police training college together,

      there was a stalker case in Devon that they studied as part

      of their training. Matthew and Mel spent time with the

      team involved. A waitress in her early twenties was be-

      ing stalked by a bartender who had developed a crush on

      her. Lots of phone calls and texts. Flowers, chocolates and

      teddy bears delivered to her flat. There were no threats

      as such and the bartender had no record of violence.

      Matthew and Mel had to report back to their colleagues

      on how it was all going. One of the police recruits was

      71

      Teresa Driscoll

      reprimanded in class for cracking a joke – I wish someone would send me flowers and chocolates.

      The feeling on the investigating team was that the guy

      was probably harmless and the crush would blow over.

      Matthew remembers the signal from the old-timers that

      they were probably wasting their time…

      Until Rachel Allen was found strangled in her shower.

      Matthew has never forgotten the photographs.

      The bartender had climbed in through a window

      of her flat and lost it when she screamed for help. He

      strangled her with the belt of her dressing gown. In his

      interview he said that he knew that they were destined

      to be together. But Rachel kept fighting it…

      ‘OK, Matt.’ Melanie’s face has darkened and Matthew

      wonders if she is remembering those dreadful photographs

      too. ‘Ideal world we find this guy while I can still waddle.

      We keep Alice safe and get enough evidence for a prosecution. That will also get me brownie points with the

      boss so I can go off on maternity leave to eat a lot more

      carrot cake. Which means that anything you can do to

      help me, I’ll be grateful.’

      ‘I’ll stay in touch, Mel. Anything I get, I’ll share. Let’s

      see how this Wednesday goes and talk again.’

      ‘Good. Thank you. And dare I ask how your Sally

      managed to have such a neat little bump? I seem to re-

      member she was barely showing at this stage.’ Mel is

      staring, crestfallen, at the huge expanse stretching her

      shirt to the limit of the fabric and forcing her to sit back

      from the table.

      ‘Absolutely no idea. But if it’s any consolation, the

      neat little bump that was Amelie has suddenly turned into

      the devil child. Strictly between us, I have an exorcism

      booked for Monday.’

      72

      CHAPTER TWELVE

      Him – before

      His gran talks a lot about ‘work’ but he doesn’t understand

      any of it. He can see that teaching is a job. And driving

      a bus and being an astronaut or a superhero. But he can’t

      see how making cups of tea and sandwiches can be a job.

      That’s what his gran says she does on Wednesday

      nights. She does it in the daytime too on Monday, Tuesday

      and Friday, but Wednesday is different. She says it’s called

      a night shift. My job is to make sure everyone is comfortable.

      Sometimes people can’t sleep so I make cups of tea and sandwiches. Help take people to the bathroom. That sort of thing.

      He asked his gran why she couldn’t stay home and

      make him cups of tea and sandwiches and call that her job but she said, Life doesn’t work like that.

      I do things for you because you’re my little soldier and I love you. I don’t get paid for doing things for you, darling. I do it because I love you. A job is when you’re paid for things. So I can pay our bills – for the flat and the food and your football club.

      He had said lots of times that he would pay her to

      stay home on Wednesday nights. They could go to the

      thingy in the wall which gives out money. He could pay

      her lots more than the stupid job. But she said it didn’t

      work like that. And there wasn’t enough money in the

      thingy in the wall.

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      Teresa Driscoll

      He loves his gran ever so much but he gets fed up

      when adults say the same things over and over again.

      Life doesn’t work like that…

      He feels in his pocket to find a sweet that George gave

      him in school at break-time. Good. He is sitting on his

      bed in his room with his little rucksack, ready for their

      new secret. Gran says he has to promise to be quieter

      than a mouse. And brave. They are going to play a sort

      of game – like hide-and-seek but he will have to hide

      and snuggle up for a sleep for quite a few hours. So he

      has two juice cartons in his little rucksack and a packet of

      biscuits and a torch. And the sweet which George made

      him promise to save so they wouldn’t get in trouble in

      class. He looks at the rucksack and worries that his gran

      has told him to pack a torch. He hates the dark but she

      has told him not to worry – that the torch is just in case.

      ‘You ready, my little soldier?’ His gran’s voice through

      the doorway sounds a little bit weird. And when he walks

      through to their little kitchen and sitting room, her eyes

      have that funny look when the words and the feelings

      don’t quite match. Like a lie, but not a wicked lie like

      a robber or a murderer. Just a lie to avoid trouble, like

      when he told the teacher everything was fine at home.

      He looks at his gran and decides not to say anything more

      just now about the dark and the torch. He will ask about

      that when they get there.

      * * *

      They walk down the stairs holding hands. He hates t
    he

      stairs because they smell of toilets and you have to mind

      your feet. And then afterwards they walk right along the

      high street for miles and miles to the bus stop. This makes

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      I Will Make You Pay

      the funny feeling in his tummy come back. When his gran

      goes to work on Wednesday nights, she always says that

      she isn’t too far away. He used to sleep at a lady called Jan’s flat on Wednesday nights, but Jan has moved away so he

      can’t stay over anymore. His gran can’t find anyone else,

      and that’s why they have to keep their secret. She says there will be terrible trouble if he tells anyone she can’t find a

      new babysitter, and people will come to take him away.

      For weeks and weeks his gran has said he must just

      be brave; and that when she was a little girl on the fam-

      ily farm, she often had to stay on her own when her dad

      was out lambing at night. It was perfectly safe, and so he

      is to go to sleep like a good boy in his bedroom and he

      mustn’t answer the door or ever, ever tell anyone their

      secret – and she will be back before he knows it. Before

      he wakes up. But he sees now that it isn’t true about her

      working nearby. It’s miles and miles away…

      He has been trying to figure out if he could run and

      run and find it in the dark but he can’t remember the

      turnings already. Too many.

      The bus is a double-decker and his gran lets them sit

      upstairs. It’s cold and it also smells a bit like the stairs and the toilets in school, but his gran puts her arm around his

      shoulders and they play I Spy. And he wins.

      When they get off there is a lot more walking, and

      then they get to the place his gran works. It’s called the

      Daisy Lawn Nursing Home but he can’t see any daisies

      or even any grass. It looks a little bit like a school but

      with no playground. He wonders if the people who live

      here don’t get to play.

      They go in through a door around the back so no

      one will see. His gran has a special card to scan to get in,

      which she wears on a ribbon round her neck. She puts her

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      Teresa Driscoll

      finger up to her mouth to say that they must be quiet like

      mice and she leads him along a corridor to a small room.

      The room does not have a window but has lots of

      shelves with all sorts of things. Blankets and pillows and

      boxes and stuff.

      His gran takes down some pillows and blankets and

      spreads them out in the corner to make a sort of bed for

      him. She says this is where he will sleep for the new secret

      but he is to be ever so quiet and ever so good.

      He doesn’t like the little room. Not at all; it is even

      smaller than his bedroom and he hates that it has no

      window.

      ‘Can’t I come and help you with the tea and the sand-

      wiches? I’ll be very good.’

      ‘No, darling. You’re not really supposed to be here

      when I’m working but I need you to get more sleep so

      you’re not so tired in school. It has to be our secret, so

      you need to go to sleep now and I’ll come and check on

      you whenever I can.’

      ‘What if I need the toilet?’

      ‘Do you need the toilet now?’

      ‘No. I don’t think so.’ He keeps very still and tries to

      think for a moment – to feel properly, deep inside, if he

      needs a wee. He shakes his head. ‘I’m OK.’

      ‘OK. Good. I’ll come back soon and ask you again.

      How does that sound?’

      ‘Can you leave the light on?’

      ‘Yes – of course. And if there’s any problem, you have

      your torch.’

      ‘What problem?’

      ‘Never mind. Try to go to sleep now so you won’t be

      tired in school. I have to go and do my work. Be a good

      boy for your gran. Yes?’

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      I Will Make You Pay

      Once she is gone, he looks around the room and can

      hear his heart in his left ear. He used to worry that his

      heart had moved up into his head and that it would ex-

      plode but his gran says this happens when it’s too quiet

      and he’s not to worry. It’s normal. He looks at the towels

      on the shelves and he counts the towels and then he tries

      to count sheep.

      It doesn’t work. He is sort of tired but also not tired.

      He takes the sweet from his pocket and pops it in his

      mouth. It is pink but is not the strawberry flavour he was

      expecting and it tastes a bit like cough medicine. At first

      it is just a bit odd but then it gets hotter and hotter in his mouth until he feels that his mouth is on fire and he is

      going to choke. He sits up, coughing and spluttering and

      realises it is a joke sweet. Some of the other boys were

      talking about this very thing last week. George has played

      a prank on him. He is furious and spits out the sweet on

      to the blanket but it is too late. His mouth is burning.

      Hot like a volcano.

      He tries to be quiet but it’s no good. As he coughs

      and wheezes, the door of the room swings open. He is

      terrified that his gran is going to be ever so cross but it

      is worse.

      It is not his gran. It is a very fat man with a bright red

      face, wearing some kind of uniform. The man steps to the

      right, so he can see him properly around all the shelving.

      ‘So what the hell is going on in here?’

      77

      CHAPTER THIRTEEN

      Alice

      I check the window to see Matthew Hill’s car still parked

      outside. Wednesday. I wave and he flashes the lights in reply. He texted at 6 a.m. when he first arrived, and I

      offered coffee but his message said he has a flask and will

      wait on the drive unless I need him.

      I let go of the curtain and sit back on the bed in

      Leanne’s guest room. I feel utterly exhausted. Couldn’t

      sleep. I remember the glow of the digital clock by the

      bed: 3 a.m., 4 a.m., 5 a.m., blinking in green digits on

      black. I check my watch – 8 a.m. now. Plenty of time for

      a shower to try to wake myself up a bit, then a final check

      of my notes before I set off for the interview.

      Under the stream of hot water, I try so hard not to

      think of the day. Of that man. I think instead about the

      actress Melinda Belstroy and wonder what she will be

      like in the flesh. You can never tell. I’ve called it wrong

      so many times – looking forward to meeting a celebrity,

      only to find them dull. And on other occasions being

      surprised to sit laughing and enjoying the company of

      someone whose politics make me shudder.

      Melinda Belstroy is fronting a new campaign for a

      bipolar charity, seeking support and tolerance in the work-

      place. She has only just admitted to having the condition

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      I Will Make You Pay

      and I’ve been lucky to secure this interview in person.

      The people in Melinda’s league normally only meet the

      national press. We’re lucky in the provinces to secure a

      quick phone call with someone like her. But Melinda ap-

      parently saw a feat
    ure I did on mental-health awareness

      in schools. She retweeted it and we’ve chatted on Twitter

      quite a bit since. So I got lucky when I bid for this chat.

      There was no way I was going to hand this interview

      over to someone else, just because the editor wants me

      to take a break. In my ideal world I’ll be pitching again

      soon for some shifts on the nationals, and this will be

      good for my cuttings.

      Dry and finally dressed, I check my iPad for my re-

      search notes and questions. Last night I watched that

      documentary again by Stephen Fry. The one where he

      questioned whether he would press the button which

      would allow him to be free of bipolar disorder. I will ask

      Melinda at the end of the interview. Yes. A bit of a cliché

      perhaps – but it will round things off nicely.

      Downstairs, I check the wall unit which operates the

      alarms and cameras as Leanne taught me, to make sure

      that everything is fine before I leave.

      Outside, Matthew winds down his window and says

      that he will drive me but I shake my head. He remon-

      strates but I’m really determined. I’ve agreed that he can

      follow me all day but I don’t want to have to explain to

      Melinda what’s going on. I want Matthew to be discreet.

      I promise him that I will keep his car in sight and he

      finally gives in.

      The traffic isn’t too bad. I feel nervous – this is the

      fifth Wednesday after all. The light bulb, the flower on

      my car, the phone call and then the cake box. Will he

      do something today?

      79

      Teresa Driscoll

      I bite my bottom lip and glance in the rear-view mir-

      ror to see Matthew directly behind. He’s ex-police and

      has a good reputation. He must do a lot of surveillance.

      This will be OK, Alice.

      I am meeting Melinda at her agent’s holiday home

      near Salcombe, and as the satnav steers me to the private

      drive, I can hardly believe it. The house has three storeys

      with huge balconies to make the most of the glorious view

      over a small bay. Like Leanne’s home, there are private

      gates, which open after I confirm my name into the little

      speaker. I say that Matthew in the car behind is also with

      the paper and will be sitting in on the interview, if that’s

      OK. They don’t seem to mind, which is a relief.

      Melinda is dressed down in jeans and white shirt and

      no make-up. I think she looks better this way, and as we

     


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