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Authors: Jo Bannister

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BOOK: Death in High Places
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“Yes, you do,” retorted Horn fiercely. “You know you and Patrick were never going to settle down and raise two-point-four children and a cocker spaniel. You knew it long before we went to Alaska. You just didn't want to face it. His death saved you from having to. And—be honest—there was just a little bit of relief mixed in with the sadness, wasn't there? Because now you could live the fantasy and there was no one, there was never going to
be
anyone, to call you a liar.”

She slapped his face, as hard as she could. But though he rocked, his eyes barely left hers. They burned with a kind of bitter victory. Beth would have given her right arm to believe that this too was a lie, but she knew better. Mainly because he was right—none of it came as a surprise to her. She'd locked it away where she'd never expected to revisit it, but she'd known before Patrick died that they were in trouble. That he was being kind when he should have been honest. She'd known he wasn't happy. Like a coward, she'd hoped he'd never summon up the courage to tell her. That it was over between them; or rather, it had never been what she wanted, but she'd blinded herself to the facts because she wanted it so much.

If Patrick had lived, sooner or later they'd have had to confront it. That would have been the end, not only of the future Beth had wanted for them but also of the one Patrick hoped for. She'd loved him too much to remain friends, to meet up for the occasional drink after work and send christening cards to one another's children. If he'd lived, she'd have lost him. His death had spared her that.

“Except that there was. Me. I knew everything about you and Patrick,” said Horn, “because he told me. Those cold windy nights in the mountains, after we'd talked about the really important stuff like overhangs and traverses, he told me what was going on in his life. I really wasn't that interested. I nodded and agreed with him from time to time, but mostly I was planning the next day's climb or sorting out my ropes or whatever. I liked the guy, I had a lot of time for him as a climber and he was good company in a bivouac, but I can't honestly say I was riveted by his love life. I listened with half an ear, to be polite.”

He managed a little smile. “Looking back, I think maybe I was a bit dim. I'm not good at social chitchat, mainly because if it doesn't involve ropes and pitons I can't work up much interest. But I should have paid more attention. Maybe then I'd have put it together. Maybe what he said that last night in the tent wouldn't have come as such a goddamned shock.”

His eyes still hadn't shifted from her face, and Beth felt somehow helpless to break their hold. She didn't know what was coming. She was pretty sure she wasn't going to like it. There seemed no possible way now to avoid it.

“You want me to tell you his famous last words? What he said as he cut the rope? You're sure—you really want to know? We can keep the genie in the bottle: we can't put it back once it's out. Do you want me to tell you what Patrick said before he fell?”

She whispered, “Yes.”

Between the bruises Horn's weather-darkened face was the gray of old leather, but his eyes blazed like a hawk's. There was no longer any kind of victory there, though, only grief and excoriating remembrance. The words came thick in his throat. “He said he loved me.”

 

CHAPTER 10

“Y
OU'RE LYING.”

Beth couldn't imagine who'd spoken. It didn't sound like her voice; and in fact it wasn't saying what she believed. She'd have given anything to think that this was the lie and one of the other stories he'd told—
any
of them—was the truth. But it explained things for which she'd never had an explanation before. She'd known things weren't right between them. At the same time she'd known Patrick cared for her, wouldn't want to hurt her. She'd known, somewhere in her heart, that there was someone else. But she'd told herself that Patrick Hanratty wasn't the kind of man to play away—that if he was in love with someone else, or just didn't like her enough anymore, he'd have been honest with her. He wouldn't have let her go on thinking there was a future for them.

But what if it wasn't another girl he'd fallen in love with? Maybe he hadn't known how to tell her, or even what to tell her. Maybe he hadn't known himself whether this was a passing madness or the way his life was turning. Maybe he didn't want to say anything about it, not even to her, until he understood better himself what was going on. Didn't want to lose her, and shock and alienate his family—including his thug of a father—until he could still the turmoil in his brain enough to work out what he wanted and what he could reasonably expect to have.

He'd never expected to die on Anarchy Ridge, leaving her with so much unfinished business she'd been unable to move on with her life.

Horn grinned savagely. “Of course I'm lying. The trick is knowing which are the lies and which is the truth.”

“This is a lie.” It
was
Beth's voice, but she knew as she said it that she was lying too.

“If that's what you want to believe.”

“Patrick loved me…”

“I know he did. But it wasn't your name he was yelling as he fell into the blizzard.”

“You bastard.” The whole of her body was shaking cold, except for the hot tears that spilled onto her cheeks. “You took him from me.
You?

Horn forced a dismissive laugh. “
I
didn't want him. Except on my rope; except for a friend. I'd never thought of Patrick that way. I didn't know he was thinking of me that way. When he talked about you and someone else, I thought he meant another girl. I'd have paid a bit more attention if I'd thought he meant me!”

“You didn't even
want
him? I
loved
him!”

Horn shrugged. He may have hoped to convey nonchalance, lack of concern, even a little man-of-the-world amusement. But he wasn't a man of the world—not in that sense, anyway. He was a joiner and a climber. He was a practical man, no good at nuances, bothered by complications. His casual shrug came across as awkward, gauche and uncouth. “But it wasn't about either of us, was it? Either you or me. It was about Patrick and what he wanted. How he saw his life shaping up.

“I damn near fell off the mountain when he told me. This was earlier, in the tent. The night before.” Horn didn't have to specify what datum he was using. “I told him he was backing the wrong horse—that he was a great climber and a terrific all-round guy, but he wasn't my idea of a good lay.” He swallowed. “In fact, I said rather more than that. Things I shouldn't have said—things I wouldn't have said if I'd had a bit more warning. Hurtful things.

“He apologized, said he understood—he was just telling me how he felt, he wasn't expecting anything from me in return. I think he was pretty shocked himself that he'd come out and said it. I don't know how long he'd been working up to it—if he'd always meant to come clean while we were in Alaska, or if it got away from him in an unguarded moment. I'd no idea it was anywhere in his mind until he said the words.

“And after he did, we never really got the chance to talk about it. He'd said all he wanted to, and so had I—too much. We avoided looking at one another for the rest of the night. Maybe if the next day had ended differently, we'd have got round to talking. We'd have had to if we wanted to keep climbing together. Or maybe we'd have got home and gone our separate ways—I don't know. We're never going to know, now.”

Tell a woman that the man she was in love with loved another man and you do more than just set the record straight. You turn her view of the world, and her own place within it, on end.

Being left for another woman is upsetting, offensive, demeaning—however kind the man is, however gently he tries to let her down, the cold, hard, inescapable fact is that, whatever attracted him to her in the first place, she doesn't have enough of it and he's met someone who has more. It's worse than being the kid who's never picked for team games. It's like being picked, tried out, and then sent back to mind the pullovers.

Now imagine being the kid who's given a tryout, then told he played so badly that not only is he not getting a place on the team but the team's out of the league and the owner of the ball is going to go play with it in another park.

Every emotion in the lexicon flickered across Beth McKendrick's face, but none of them settled for more than a moment. There was of course shock. There was outrage, and disbelief. There was ridicule. Then incredulity lifted a corner of its petticoats to give a glimpse of the mental turmoil beneath, as if she was at least trying to acknowledge the possibility. But it was too hard a truth to face, and she slammed back into the comfort of her default position, which was anger. It stiffened her sinews and suffused her cheeks with blood, but it didn't reach all the way up to her eyes. Her eyes were appalled, and terribly wounded, and they believed.

Beth McKendrick and Nicky Horn stared at one another across the unbearable truth—the young woman who'd have been willing to die for Patrick Hanratty's love and the young man who wasn't, both their lives blighted by a biological quirk that should barely have been worth comment except that a lack of honesty about it had woven filaments of kindness and misunderstanding, and the desperate attempt to avoid causing pain had trapped them all as surely as a gill net traps fish.

“He told you that?” Beth was struggling for the words. “That I loved him, and he loved you?”

“Yes.”

She went on staring at him, humiliation rising to join the maelstrom in her eyes. “What did you do? Laugh?”

“No.” He wasn't laughing now either. “There was nothing to laugh about. What he said—the way he was feeling—it knocked me sideways. Multiply what you're feeling now by about three and you're still not close. I thought I knew him, and it turned out I hardly knew him at all. And the thing about being in a tent in a snowstorm halfway up a mountain is, you can't stalk out and slam the door and be on your own until you've got your head together. We were going to be sleeping within reach of one another. Other times on other mountains we'd shared a sleeping bag to stay warm. You can imagine how
that
was going through my mind.”

“You mean, you really didn't know? Until that trip—that night under Anarchy Ridge?”

Horn nodded grimly. “I had no idea. Maybe there were clues, but I was never any good at picking up what people aren't actually telling me. I thought we were talking about him and you. I'd no idea we were talking about him and you, and me.”

“And when you did?”

He looked away. His voice was almost inaudible. “I called him a freak.”

Most everyone who ever met him liked Patrick Hanratty. There was a gentleness about him, a sensitivity, a native inborn kindness, that made it hard not to. Everyone who knew about his background marveled that his father had managed first to sire such a son, then to raise him without trampling all that tenderness underfoot. The truth was, of course, that Patrick carried the imprint of his father's boots on his soul every day of his short life. He was afraid of his father every day. University had been the best time of his life because it was the longest time he was beyond the old thug's reach. He took to climbing for the same reason. Halfway up a mountain he had only the wind and the ice and the possibility of avalanches to worry about.

If he'd lived long enough he'd have got away, got far away with a woman, or a man, that he cared about, and the towering terror of his childhood would have faded to a mere distant shadow. But he was only twenty-three when he died. There hadn't been time for him to fulfill any of his potentials. The abiding love of old friends was the only memorial he left.

As it turned out, Beth McKendrick hadn't known him as well as she'd thought either, but she was still probably the one who knew him best. And if he hadn't loved her as she'd hoped, she was probably the one who loved him best. The pain of losing him had never faded. Partly because she'd never talked about it to anyone. A little to her father—not, even at the time, going so far as to share the depth of her grieving—and not at all to anyone else. Someone with a more critical self-awareness might have been struck by the similarities between Patrick's life and hers—the secrets, the internalizing—but Beth had never put herself, her own feelings, under the microscope. Perhaps because of that, she hadn't the tools to manage them when they ran out of control.

They were running out of control again now. She looked at the haunted face of Nicky Horn and wondered at the volume of hatred her heart could hold. Her voice shook with it. “Someone told you he loved you. And you called him a freak.”

“I'm not proud of it,” mumbled Horn, still avoiding the knives of her gaze.

“Well, that's something, I suppose,” she managed. “The man I loved put his heart and soul into your hands. And you tore them into shreds and threw away the pieces. How could you do that? Whatever else he was, he was your friend, and he found the courage to be honest with you. And you treated him as if he'd done something shameful. You knew him, you knew how easy it was to hurt him—you must have known what that would do to him!”

“You're not watching the monitors.”

“It wasn't like that,” Horn protested weakly. “He didn't give me a chance. I needed time to get my head round it.”

But Beth in her prescience was following the unfolding scene where he would not tell or have her see. Her mouth rounded in a slow
O.
“But there was no time. No
afterwards,
when you'd both calmed down enough to talk about it sensibly. As soon as the sun was up you were back out on the mountain, with the worst pitch of the climb ahead of you. If the storm had eased up at all, it certainly wasn't over, and you should have stayed in the tent. But you couldn't, could you? Not after what had happened. You wanted to finish the climb and put it behind you. And Patrick thought he'd lost you forever. On top of that he thought that, when you got back, you'd tell everyone. He thought his father would find out.”

BOOK: Death in High Places
13.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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