Authors: Michael J Malone
Tags: #bad samaritan, #michael j malone, #saraband, #contraband
âSounds like you have experience of that yourself,' says Ale. âA handsome boy like you must have girls queuing up for a date.'
He exhales through pursed lips. âAs if. Not interested. More bother than they're worth.' Then he closes his mouth tight, like he has reminded himself to only answer the question and not provide any additional information.
âWhat do you remember about the break-up?' I ask.
âTears and snot, mate,' he says. âSimon was gutted, but he's too proud to go begging and left her to it.'
âWhy do you think they broke up?'
âRan its natural course, didn't it. They were together right through secondary school. Uni life gives a different perspective, eh? The big bad. Much more to experience.' His hands are on his lap now. A little more relaxed. It's like he's confident that we will know all this and is therefore more happy to give details. Suggests he and Simon ran over his conversation with us.
âThat day in the hospital. When we came to see Simon. Why did you run off?' asks Ale.
âDunno what you mean?' he answers and scratches at the side of his forehead.
âYour mother said you were with her. I'm thinking you saw us and legged it. I want to know why.'
âThat's not what happened,' he answers. âI just remembered, like.' A weak smile. âI dropped mum off at the hospital, and then I remembered I had a class.'
âSo why were you hiding at the hospital reception when we came out?'
âWhat?'
âI saw you at the reception area,' says Ale. âYou were waiting for us to leave before you went back in. Why did you want to avoid us?'
âDon't know what you're talking about.' He sits up, slides his feet under the chair, crosses his arms.
âAnd we checked your class timetable for that day.' I gamble and go for the lie. âYou had a free afternoon.'
âYeah, it was an assignment I had to finish. I was late. Had to get it done for the next morning.'
âSo why say you had a class?' Ale asks.
âWhat is this?' he asks. âAm I being arrested or something?'
âNo, Matt. You avoided us that day and when someone does that it suggests they are hiding something. We want to know what you are hiding.'
âI'm hiding nothing, mate.' The skin on his neck is mottled. He gives it a scratch. âAnd I wasn't hiding from you. Don't know what you are talking about.' As he continues speaking his voice gets louder.
âThen we saw you in The Horseshoe with Karen Gardner. You legged it as soon as you spotted us,' says Ale.
âIt was the guys you were with,' he answers. âForeman and Cook.' He sits forward, chin jutting out. âThey've been saying shit on Facebook about Simon.' He slumps back in his seat. Crosses his arms. âKaren dragged me out of there before Iâ¦' realising he was about to suggest a violent act, he paused, ââ¦made an arse of myself.'
âWise move, son,' I say. âWouldn't be the brightest thing to do with two police officers as witness.'
âAye ⦠well.'
âYou and Simon, did you ever double date?'
âDo what?' He's not wondering what the words mean, but why the question is being asked.
âIt's when you and a pal each take out a girl,' answers Ale.
âI wasn't ⦠â Exhales. âNow and again. Simon and Aileen have been, like, forever. I've not met any that've stuck. Women are nuts.'
Ale smiles. âNone taken.' Her expression a request for more information.
Matt is unrepentant. âOne lassie. I
'd
been seeing her for three weeks. Three weeks, yeah? Told her I was thinking of getting a tattoo. She was like, nope, not happening. Said she could deal with a couple but that was my lot. ' He purses his lips and blows. âThree weeks and that makes her my boss? No chance. I was like, take a walk, hen.'
âWhat about Karen Gardner?' I ask.
âWhat about her?'
âDouble date?'
A shrug. âWe went out in a foursome kinda thing a couple of times. Simon and me don't socialise much really. He always hadâ¦' he pauses before he says Aileen's name, â â¦and I had my own pals and the guys down at the rugby club. Anyway, Karen's a good laugh like. A mate. Don't see her like that.'
âDoes she see you the same way?' asks Ale.
âAye,' says Matt, his expression as adamant his tone. He's leaning back in his chair, long legs stretched out in front of him, hands soft, resting on his thighs. He's in safe territory, and from his perspective, dealing with everything that we're throwing at him. Time to mix it up a little.
âWhat about Aileen?' I ask.
âWhat about her?' He presses his hands on to the sides of his chair, switches his weight and is now fully upright in his chair.
âShe was a bit of a babe,' I say. âEver rub one out while thinking about her naked in your brother's bed just through the wall?'
He looks from me to Ale and presumably sees nothing but the same frank curiosity on her face.
âJeezuz. You people are sick,' he says. âShe's not long dead and you'reâ¦' He shakes his head, and I'm thinking this is interesting. He's defending her honour. A wee spot of chivalry, and he cares more than he is letting on.
Is it really just on behalf of his twin brother? Or is there something more at play here?
âEver listen to them going at it and wish it was you?' I ask.
âYou're sick.' He shakes his head. And scratches at the skin on his neck.
Realising that at this stage we're not going to get much more out of him, we escort Matt out of the secure area and in to the public part of the station. Explain that we're going to arrange a lift for him back to the house.
âDon't worry about it, mate.' He sticks his hands in his pockets. âI'll find my own way home.'
Just then Harkness walks in the front door with Karen Gardner.
Matt and Karen lock eyes. Say nothing. Matt walks past her and out of the door.
âInteresting,' mumbles Alessandra. Then. âHi Karen. Thanks for popping in.'
âSure. No worries,' she replies just above a whisper.
* * *
In the interview room, Ale takes the lead. Goes through the legal stuff.
âBefore we start,' she says. âCan we get you a wee cup of tea or something?'
âNo,' answers Karen. Then, as if she has remembered her manners, âThanks.' And offers a weak smile. In contrast to Matt, she's sitting upright, spine pressing into the back of the chair, knees together, hands clasped on the table top. She looks like she has just discovered she has brittle bone disease and is scared to move.
âI know we've spoken before, Karen,' says Ale. âBut that was an informal chat. This is nothing to worry about, but we just need to get that all on record. OK?'
âOK,' Karen squeaks. And I'm struggling to place this girl with the one in the red car who flashed her boobs to the old man next door to the Banks house.
We ask Karen to outline the events of the night Aileen died. For the record. She complies. Spelling it all out, exactly the same as when we first talked to her. And it's almost too perfect. People get it this exact when they have rehearsed. Ask someone for details of an event, particularly when they appear to be under stress, and something in the story will change. Sure, if they are being truthful the facts will repeat, but something in the telling will change.
I scan my memory. Yup. As far as I can make out it was word-for-word.
âHow did you and Aileen meet?' I ask.
âAt the supermarket.'
âHit it off straight away?'
A nod. Her eyes shine a little bit more.
âWhat drew you together?'
âDunno,' she answers. âMy parents are divorced. Hers were having problems. I
'd
just broken up with a boyfriend.' A long pause as she stares at the table top, sifting and sorting through memory. A smile laden with affection. âWe both loved
Twilight
.' A tear escapes and she wipes it away.
âYou two were great friends, eh?' asks Ale.
Karen nods. A sob escapes. âSorry,' she says. âStill not quite used toâ¦'
âNo need to apologise, Karen. We understand. You've lost someone you care about.' Ale reaches forward and pats her hand. Realising this isn't entirely professional, she withdraws and sits back in her chair. âI'm sure Aileen would be proud of you. The way you're dealing with this.'
âYeah?' asks Karen, as if desperate for approval from the grown-ups.
âYeah,' answers Ale, her tone like a hug.
Karen sniffs. Wipes away another tear. Settles into her chair a little more.
âTell us a little bit more about that night. Before you two split up. Was there anyone around, anyone who caught your attention apart from the usual people you would expect to bump into when you were out?'
Karen shakes her head. Stares at the tabletop. Thinks some more. âNo.'
âSure?'
A nod.
âPlease think carefully, Karen,' I say. âThere may be something in your head. A clue that could help us catch this person.'
âIt was just the usual crowd. With a few randoms. But nobody who sticks out.'
âDid you see Simon that night?'
âNo,' she answers. âAlthough he did text Aileen. Just to say hi. But she ignored it.'
âWhy?'
âShe said he was being a dick.'
âI never met the girl, but I don't think she knew what she wanted,' observed Ale.
Karen loosened her hands a little. âYou're right. One minute she was like, let's find some guys to party with. Next she was missing Simon and texting him.'
âHow do you think that would have been for Simon?' I ask.
âMust've driven him nuts. I told her she was being a crazy bitch. She had to cut things off with him, like, completely, you know? Or they
'd
never move on.'
âMakes sense to me,' says Ale. âWhat do you think would've happened eventually with Simon and Aileen?'
âThey would've got back together,' she answers with certainty and a slight note of regret.'
âWhy do you say that?' I ask.
âJeez, they were made for each other. Totally. You just had to spend five minutes in their company to see.'
âHow did that make you feel?'
âA wee bit jealous, if I'm honest.' She tucks some hair behind her right ear. âI
'd
give anything to have someone like that. And she just throws it away.'
âTell us about Simon.'
A note of suspicion forms on her face. âAre you asking me if I think he did it?'
âNo,' I replied. âJust looking for the best friend's perspective. Is he a nice guy? Did he treat her badly? Did he ever hit Aileen or verbally abuse her?'
âYou don't really know what goes on in someone else's relationship do you?' she says, thinking aloud. âI always thought Simon was too nice, really. And a bit boring. No one's that nice, eh?' She's a little more animated as she says this. As if she's enjoying the chance to have a bit of a gossip. âOr that safe.'
âWhat do you mean by too nice?' Ale asks.
âWell,' she draws the word out as if it was made of two syllables. As if trying to build up her energy to convince herself as well as us. âI mean, he was a volunteer on the Samaritan phone line. Apparently he did quite a lot of online ⦠what do you call it ⦠counselling. On a couple of other sites an' all. He's only in his early twenties for God's sake. Get a life mate,' she sniffs.
âWhat about Matt?' Ale asks. âEver fancy a wee slice of that? He's a handsome guy. Got those rugby-player thighs.'
âIf you like that kind of thing.' Her tone is defensive.
âOh come on,' laughs Ale. âHe's fit.' They're girls together.
Karen allows herself a smile. âAnd he bloody knows it.'
âDid you guys everâ¦?'
Karen tosses her head. âHe wishes. We had a snog once when we were drunk.' She holds a hand up and slices her long fingernails back and forward across her throat. âElectricity was zero, mate. Was like kissing a fridge.'
âWhose idea was it?' I ask.
âHis. Totally. Said we needed to get it out of the way or we
'd
be,' she holds both hands up and does the air-quote thing, â“haunted by the possibility of it for the rest of our lives”.'
âWhat a shit chat-up line,' says Ale.
âYeah, and it worked.' Karen offers a smile. âHe got the kiss.'
âAnd nothing else?'
âNothing else.'
âDisappointed?' Ale asks.
âNot bothered really. Would be nice hanging off his arm, but it wasn't to be.'
âIs Simon more your type? The silent, nice and safe one?'
âAs if,' she sneers. âApart from the boring fart thing, he was my mate's ex. Out of bounds. Totally.'
âDisappointed?' I ask. âThe nice guys are the ones you go back to, no?'
âNot even going there,' she answers. âA friend's ex?' She shakes her head. âToo much grief. Besides, they weren't really over. Not really. The only person who couldn't see that was Aileen.' She tails off. Stares into space. Finds a knot of grief and rubs at it. Tears spark in her eyes before shining a trail down the pale of her cheek. She sniffs. Palms her face dry. It is a gesture that is awkward and serves to remind me how young she is.
I push aside any thought of her youth. I can't let that influence how we deal with her.
âKaren,' I say, and pause. Wait for her to look up from the table and meet my gaze. âWhat are you not telling us?' I don't realise how harsh my tone is until I catch a warning glance from Alessandra. Fuck it. This girl needs to know how serious we are. âWe need to get to the truth here. Your best friend in the world is dead. No more nights out, nights in, girlie chats over fucking
Twilight
, Facebook or
The Only Way is Essex
⦠this is as real as it gets. And in your head is a vital clue that will help usâ¦'