Deadly Deceit

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Authors: Jean Harrod

Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Suspense, #Crime, #Murder, #Women Sleuths

BOOK: Deadly Deceit
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Deadly Deceit

JEAN HARROD

© Jean Harrod, 2016

Published by York Authors Coffee Shop

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, adapted, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, or otherwise without the prior written permission of the author.

The rights of Jean Harrod to be identified as the author of this work have been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

This is a work of fiction. The events in the novel did not happen. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events, is purely coincidental.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

Maps
Turks & Caicos Islands & The Bahamas Political Map
© Peter hermes Furian | Dreamstime

ISBN 978-0-9929971-4-4 (Paperback)
ISBN 978-0-9929971-5-1 (epub)
ISBN 978-0-9929971-6-8 (mobi)

Book layout and design by Clare Brayshaw

Prepared by:
York Publishing Services Ltd
64 Hallfield Road
Layerthorpe
York YO31 7ZQ
Tel: 01904 431213

Website:
www.yps-publishing.co.uk

For Jane

Acknowledgements

Throughout the writing of my second novel in this ‘Diplomatic Crime’ series, I’ve had the same wonderful team helping me, as well as many readers urging me on.

Many, many thanks to my sister Jane for her unflagging advice and support; and to my writer friends Christine, Fiona, Paul and Margaret, who again have been with me every step of the way on this journey.

I owe thanks as well to Lisanne, who is a superb editor; and to John, Alicia, Clare, and Paula.

A special thanks too to all the wonderful people I met in The Turks and Caicos Islands.

The events in this novel did not happen. Its plot and characters exist only in my imagination.

About the Author

Born and educated in the UK, Jean was employed as a British diplomat for many years, working in Embassies and High Commissions in Australia, Brussels, the Caribbean, China, East Berlin, Indonesia, Mauritius, and Switzerland. She has travelled extensively around the world and writes about all the countries she has lived in, or visited.

‘Deadly Diplomacy’, set in Australia, was her debut diplomatic crime novel, and the first of a series featuring diplomat Jess Turner and DI Tom Sangster.

‘Deadly Deceit’, set in the Turks and Caicos Islands, Caribbean, is the second in the series.

Jean now lives in North Yorkshire. An active contributor to regional theatre, she has written and staged several plays.

www.jeanharrod.com

1

Bay of Cap-Haitien

North Coast of Haiti, Caribbean

The sloop slipped out of the bay on a strong swell in the dead of night. The sea was already rough. Too rough.

Nobody spoke, but in the dark she could feel their fear. Soft crying and moaning echoed all around. And retching. Bile rose in her own throat as the smell of vomit filled her nostrils, making her want to heave.

A soft whimper made her gaze down at her baby, squirming in her arms. She pulled the shawl around her little one, and started softly singing…

Dodo titit

Si ou pa dodo

Krab la va manje ou…

She could feel pins and needles creeping into her toes. Uncrossing her legs, she stamped her feet. She wanted to stand up and move about, but she couldn’t. They were squashed together in the bowels of the small boat. Eighty women and children. Maybe more.

She took deep breaths of the fresh air squeezing through the cracks of the hatchway, while the wind rattled around the edges of its ill-fitting wooden cover. At least she was sitting right under it. She’d watched the men in the village building the sloop by hand from old planks, while the women stitched together bits of fabric and nylon to make the sails. It was a rough vessel. Just like the one her papa used to fish from, until the sea had taken him, and brought her family nothing but grief.

She closed her eyes, and pictured him: big, round face, with smooth skin made even darker by working in the sun, curly black hair, and dark eyes that lit up whenever he saw her. He’d tell her stories of the sea whenever he came home. She’d loved that. Loved him.

She flinched as the sloop shuddered. It was travelling upwind into the waves, so she expected a rough crossing. She respected the sea, knew its ways. Even here, below deck, she could feel the swell getting higher. We should go back, and wait for better weather. But she knew they couldn’t. The police might catch them, and scupper the boat. Then they would lose all their money. It had taken Pierre years of hard work to save up for their passage. He’d gone first. Now he’d sent for her, and the child he’d never seen.

They had to go on.

Everything will be all right when we reach Pierre, she told herself over and over. She pulled an envelope out of her pocket, drew out his photo and kissed it in the dark.

The baby moaned again. Was it hungry or sick? Or perhaps just sensing the fear all around? She offered her breast but the baby refused to latch on. “You’re going to meet your papa soon, child. Very soon.” She finished the lullaby…

Sleep little one

If you don’t sleep

The crab will eat you…

When the baby was asleep, she pulled the shawl tighter around her, and tied the ends in a knot around her waist to bind them even closer together. Never to be parted. Singing the lullaby again, more to comfort herself than the child, her mind returned to happier times, to her mother and father, and to her wedding to Pierre. She lost herself in those happy memories.

Later, tipping over sideways into the lap of the woman next to her, she sat up straight wondering where she was. She’d dozed off. Her stomach turned as she felt the sloop rolling up and down, side to side, on the rising waves.

She could hear men on deck shouting to each other. The wind still howled through the sails and rigging. The rickety vessel’s wooden frame creaked and moaned, as if protesting about being out on the ocean on such a stormy night. Was it light yet? They seemed to have been travelling for hours.

When you see light in the sky, you’ll be here, with me
. That’s what Pierre had written. Here, below deck, it was still pitch black. She wriggled her toes and rubbed her feet again.

The shouting became louder, more urgent. Her heart started pounding. She could hear many footsteps running around above her. She listened intently.

Land!
That’s what they’re shouting.
Land!

She felt a surge of happiness.

Suddenly, she was jolted and catapulted forward as the old vessel smashed into something. It stood still for a moment as if dazed by the blow.


The reef!”
Voices were screaming.

She heard a loud crack, and felt the vessel roll and tip over to one side. Piercing cries rang out above as men were plunged into the sea. All around her, women and children started screaming as they tumbled on top of each other. Suddenly, a wall of water rushed through the cracked hull, sweeping her and the baby up through the hatch, and out into the sea.

The cold. The shock…

Water rushed into her mouth and lungs. Spluttering, she felt herself being dragged under by the weight of her long skirt. With one arm in a vice-like grip around the baby, she scrabbled with the other through the water, kicking furiously, not knowing whether she was swimming to the top, or the bottom, of the ocean.

A moment later she surfaced, gasping for air, and sobbing with terror.
My baby!
She turned onto her back to get the child clear of the water.

Light in the sky!
She could see light breaking in the sky, as Pierre had promised.

Voices all around her shouted for help, then she heard: “
Requins!

Sharks?
Hysterical, she screamed as something brushed past her. But it was just a piece of wood floating by. Grabbing it, she pulled her baby out of the shawl and lay it on the plank.

A man swam past, heading for shore.


Help
,” she cried. “
Please, my baby!

He didn’t even look her way.

Holding the baby in front of her, she kicked and pushed her way towards lights in the distance. It had to be shore. It looked so far away, yet the waves seemed calmer now. She must be inside the reef, and that gave her hope. She kept steady, pushing and kicking. Pushing and kicking. She could hardly breathe with the exhaustion, but she kept going. Pushing and kicking.

“Nearly there, child,” she kept saying, to urge herself on. The baby didn’t move or cry, as if sensing their fight for life.

Her toes brushed something. She froze, but it wasn’t a shark.

The soft seabed! She put one foot down cautiously, then the other. Now, she was standing on wobbly legs, shoulder high in water. Sobbing with relief, she picked her baby up from the plank and waded towards the beach.

Scrambling out of the waves, she flopped onto soft sand, and rolled onto her back. Dizzy with exertion and shock, her heart was pumping so hard she thought it would burst.

Someone was beside her now. Hands were pulling at her. Her baby started crying. She clutched it tight. But the hands wouldn’t let go.

“No!” She struggled to sit up. A blow to the back of her head sent pain searing through her body. Her head spun. Another blow. Then another.

As she slipped into darkness, she heard her baby screaming as it was wrenched from her arms.

2

Grand Turk

Turks and Caicos Islands

Caribbean

Michael Grant paced around the old lighthouse on the northern end of Grand Turk, overlooking the infamous north-west reef. He couldn’t see much. The night was pitch black with cloud cover, but he could hear the Atlantic rollers pounding onto the reef in the distance, and feel the spray carried on the wind in his face.

The storm had raged all night. The noise of torrential rain battering the roof of his old house, and the wind rattling the plantation shutters, had driven him crazy. He’d tried to work in his study, sifting through the sequence of events over the last year – dates, times and conversations. It was important to get everything right, to forget nothing, but being cooped up in those conditions only added to his torment. When the storm eased, he’d slipped out of the house and driven up here.

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