Dark Mirrors (36 page)

Read Dark Mirrors Online

Authors: Siobhain Bunni

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Contemporary Fiction, #Crime Fiction, #Poolbeg, #Fiction

BOOK: Dark Mirrors
11.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Holy shit!” Harry exclaimed. “What the fuck?”

“Come on,” she said, the air in the room beginning to thicken around her, the breath tightening in her chest. “I need to get out of here or I’m going to suffocate.” Re-wrapping the gun, she placed it and the notebook in her bag.

Harry took her hand as they marched down the steps of the bank.

For a fleeting moment Esmée had almost felt sorry for the lovely Imelda as she waved them to the lift. She would be in some mess when eventually it was discovered that someone other than Philip Myers had breached the bank’s thankfully pretty-damn-lax security systems.

“Are you okay?” he asked, squeezing her hand gently.

“Not really.”

“What are you going to do with it?” he asked.

“I have no idea. Just please don’t tell your mother.”

“Don’t worry, Esmée. I understand the implications of our find. I’m not going to tell anyone. Especially not my mother – she’d have a breakdown. She says she’s okay, but she’s not. This might push her over the edge. I have to think about Beth too – she mustn’t know. I’m not going to say anything. You have my word.”

She had no option but to trust Harry. He was no threat, his focus being his mum and protecting her.

* * *

Julie was waiting for them when they arrived back.

“Thank God you’re okay! You made it!” she cried, relieved they had returned alone and without a police escort.

“He was brilliant,” Esmée enthused, following behind. “I literally couldn’t have done it without you both! Thanks.”

“Well?” Julie asked expectantly, looking at Esmée. “What was in it?”

“Not what I was expecting, that’s for sure!” Removing only the notebook from her bag, she handed it to Julie. She and Harry had already examined it in the car and could make nothing of it. Inside the pages were filled with names and dates and a series of disjointed words.

“Yeah, a complete waste of time and effort!” said Harry.

“I was expecting so much more,” Esmée said sadly.

“Like what?” Julie asked.

“I have no idea,” she shrugged, “but just something more than this.”

Julie was flicking through the pages of the notebook. “It doesn’t make much sense, does it?”

“A code?” Harry offered.

“Absolutely no idea,” Esmée replied, not caring one bit about the black book. She just wanted to get out of there. To be alone. To think.

“What do we do about this?” Julie asked, waving the book. “It must mean something to someone?”

“We can’t do anything,” Esmée said. “If we do they’ll know we got into the box.”

“Right,” Julie signed. “Duhhh!” she laughed, relieved that the ordeal was over.

* * *

Robert watched the mayhem unfold as Tommo walloped the guard and Brady yelled at him.

“What the fuck did ya do that for?” he shouted, pointing at the unconscious guard and whimpering Mike, bloodied after the kick to his head.

“He was goin’ for me,” the aggrieved Tommo complained.

“For fuck sake! We agreed no shit would go down today! And you morons have already done damage to yer woman and maybe her kid.” Brady whacked him hard across the face.

Tommo dropped the gun as he struggled to remain standing. He put a hand to his face and just as he turned his head to object he saw her reaching out. Amanda had freed her hand and was straining towards the panic button fixed to the underside of the table. Tommo yelled and lunged forward but Brady got to her first.

“You stupid cow!” he yelled, grabbing her wrist.

In the ensuing panic nobody noticed Robert pick up the gun and didn’t heed when he left the room and closed the door. He hurried to the window and checked through the blades of the blinds if anyone had heard the shrieks.

Frank Gill was walking across the small asphalt car park. He’d done the cash run a few months back and Robert recognised immediately who and what he was. Why was he here? Could he hear the commotion inside?

Robert panicked as the undercover garda leaned down to the window of the silver Golf, their supposed getaway car, glistening in the glorious sunshine, and looked towards the bank.

He was coming over. He’d be at the door in minutes to investigate the delay with the delivery, to see where the helmeted men with the empty steel cases were. He’d see. He’d ruin it. Ruin it all. Silently he willed him to turn around and leave. He wished him away but he kept coming.

“Turn around – turn around,” Robert whispered.

The alarm bells shattered the morning air.

Ironically it was Brady himself who had set them off. Having successfully stopped Amanda’s attempted lunge for the panic button, he had stood upright and as he fixed his flopping hair looked down with contempt at the cowering woman. He didn’t heed Mike sitting behind him, his back to the wall. He didn’t notice as Mike raised his leg and foot, pulled back, aimed then pushed forward to reach the target of Brady’s backside. Instinctively Brady’s hand reached out to brace his fall and grasped the edge of the table, his thumb pressing against the discreet little white button underneath.

“Fuck,” Brady whispered to himself.

The loud bellow of the alarm erupted into the early morning, causing everyone to jump, including Frank Gill who stopped for only a brief second before putting his hand to his hip. Robert mistook the reach for his phone as a reach for a gun. Adrenaline rushed to his head. Rushing to the door he unlocked and yanked it open it a crack, raised his arm, gun steady in hand, and pulled the trigger. No one was going to screw this up for him, especially some curious Pig. No way. There was still time, they could take what they needed. The gun fired and the projected bullet reached its target. Clean. Decisive. Deadly.

The banking hall was empty. All the activity was out the back. No one saw him do it. Firing from inside the door, he was out of the line of vision of Maurice Mahon, the driver of the undercover police car, who didn’t even hear its loud recoil with the banging din of the bells. He watched him fall and cursed the silver Golf as it jerked into gear and accelerated away. The gun. What to do with it? Where would he hide it? He scanned the room quickly, looking for a spot. He knew they’d search the bank, then he’d be snared without doubt. An immediate calm, an almost psychotic moment of clarity, came over him: he was still the victim, he was his own cover. He quickly pulled up his trouser leg and pushed the gun into the leg of his sock, firmly wedging the nose into his shoe. He was still the victim. They’d not search him. And he was right. They didn’t. His decision to keep the gun was a calculated one. He might need it again. It had both Brady’s and Tommo’s prints all over it: good security, if needs be.

* * *

Through the night she sat on the floor, her back to the wall, watching her children sleep soundly. She couldn’t sleep. How could she? This was where she felt safest. She didn’t want to be alone but couldn’t call anyone. Philip had destroyed her and there was no way she could tell anyone that she had, albeit unintentionally, brought her father’s murderer into their fold.

As soon as she’d left Harry and Julie, no longer buoyed up by their company and the excitement of their joint enterprise, her spirits had taken a plunge. Now, vulnerable and alone, she sat out the dark hours with tears streaming unrelenting down her face. She had reached the bottom of her endurance reservoir, with nothing left to give. She prayed for an epiphany, the moment where a solution would appear like an apparition to set everything right.

When it did come, there was no blinding flash of inspiration but rather a dispassionate logical reasoning that made perfect sense.

The sun was rising when she powered up her computer and Googled his name. She had come across a wealth of information about him before so she knew what she was looking for. He was a dangerous man, but Esmée knew that this was the best thing, the only thing to do. Terrified, but focused, she played out the morning as usual, taking the children to school, and then booked herself a cab, leaving a handwritten note on the kitchen table, in case she never came back.

“Where to?” her driver asked as she climbed into the back seat, his eyes meeting hers through the tinted rear-view mirror, dark but smiling.

She felt in her bag for the comforting bulk of her gym weight, foolish protection she knew, but reassuring all the same.

“Town, please.”

“No problem, love. Grand day, isn’t it?”

“Sure is, great to see the sun for a while.” Deep breaths, she told herself, settle into the journey and when we’re halfway in, then ask.

She could feel his eyes on her reflection and worked hard to combat the magnetic urge to look back. She needed to pee.

“Going anywhere nice?” he asked as they passed through the third set of lights.

“Eh . . . Nowhere special really, just a trip into the shops, that’s all.”

“My wife loves the shops, she does,” he enthused. “She’d spend all me cash in those posh boutiques if she had her way. Does your hubby not mind ya visiting shops in the middle of the week?”

The mere mention of the word hubby and her heart skipped. A coincidence? Probably. Possibly not.

“Do ya not have a taxi company of your own out this way? It’s a fierce journey all the way out here then back again. Gonna cost ya!” His head shook. He was laughing at her.

It was too soon, she knew, but she came out with it anyway.

“Actually, I like, I mean prefer, this company. A friend of mine owns it.”

“A friend, you say?” This time she caught his eyes flicking at her. “Are ya sure ’bout that? You don’t look like the sort to be hangin’ out with my boss, and I’ve known Jimmy a few years now, I’ll tell ya!” He held her stare for seconds that went on for hours.

“I haven’t seen him in a while.” The shake in her voice a dead giveaway. Her knees trembled and her heart ticked like a time bomb – any more and she, if not her bladder, would burst. “I wouldn’t mind catching up with him again. Is he about?” She held her breath.

An electric silence prevailed for another three sets of lights. Red, Red, Amber. He didn’t reply.

“Well, if you do see your boss, tell him I’ll see him, today, same place as last time at twelve noon.”

He dropped her, as requested, at the corner of O’Connell Street, taking her fare, and a considerable tip. She watched him drive down the quays then made her way to the station to catch the train home. She could hardly believe what she had just done. Her own audacity amazed her while the quake in her knees threatened to topple her altogether. Calm yet scared, she wondered what kind of a fall she was setting Philip up for, or herself if it all went wrong.

* * *

It felt odd to be in the park without the children. Rogue hollers of “Mum” triggering the instinctive reflex of her head while she sat on the same bench as last time, patiently, waiting. She had no idea if he would turn up, didn’t know if she’d given him enough time. He was obviously a busy man. Her sudden empathy disturbed her.

She sat down on the bench in the middle of the playground and waited. Almost half an hour had passed when she spotted the taxi driver from her morning trip standing at a distance from her. Hands in his bomber pockets, he nodded to her and then walked in the direction of the exit. Assuming he expected her to follow him, she got up and followed him to his cab.

He was already sitting in the front seat with the engine idling – waiting for her, she supposed. This time she sat into the front seat. The door wasn’t even fully closed when without a word he shifted the car into gear and hit the road towards the city centre.

The entire journey was travelled in silence. She sat still, with her hands clasped nervously in her lap. She kept him in her peripheral vision but he didn’t so much as sneak even one curious glance at her.

Twenty minutes into the trip, he indicated and pulled into the car park of a pub on the outskirts of the city, in a landscape dominated by industrial units and vast open waste ground.

“Come on,” he said, getting out of the car, and waited for her to join him before walking towards the entrance. “You’ve got some balls,” he commented, shaking his head as they crossed the car park then walked ahead, not waiting for a response, and held the door open for her to pass
through.

Her eyes took some time to adjust to the subdued light inside the bar which was a reverent throwback to the mid-seventies. Like an aging hooker, years beyond her libidinous glory, dressed in faded red-velvet embossed wallpaper and sporting crimson crimplene wall-lamps with dripping red-tasselled pleated shades, it cast a tone, a devilish hue, of what you might catch if you stayed too long.

The smell of stale beer, vomit and disinfectant turned her stomach as she ventured towards her host, perched on a high stool at the brown painted bar, highball in hand. Whiskey, she assumed. He drank long from his glass, putting it down, empty, on the bar as she approached. He didn’t stand up.

“I’m not sure I like surprises, Mrs Myers.” His eyes took their fill of her from top to bottom, predictably lingering momentarily on her chest. “Still lookin’ good though.” He intended to intimidate and reinforce his power.

But Esmée, quaking on the inside yet calm on the outside, stood tall in front of him, with her thumbs hooked into the back pockets of her jeans. She let him look. She’d known he would. She didn’t care.

Other books

Over the Blue Mountains by Mary Burchell
The Defector by Evelyn Anthony
By a Slow River by Philippe Claudel
Poltergeeks by Sean Cummings
Dead Dream Girl by Richard Haley
Madeleine & the Mind by Felicia Mires
Greegs & Ladders by Mitchell Mendlow