Authors: C. L. Taylor
Tags: #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #General, #Mystery & Detective
I couldn’t, wouldn’t believe it. Mum was lying on her duvet in her grey tweed skirt, white blouse and beige cardigan. When I gently stroked her cheek I was shocked to find she was still warm.
‘Quick!’ I stared up at Mary. ‘Get the doctor back. There’s been a mistake. She’s still warm.’ I stood up and put a hand on Mum’s chest. ‘Do you know CPR? It might not be too late.’
‘Sue.’ Mary put a hand on my shoulder. ‘She’s dead. I’m sorry.’
‘But …’ I looked at Mum’s cheek, expecting it to twitch in her sleep, to see a thin line of drool winding its way down from her open mouth to her jawbone, but I saw nothing. She was utterly still. That’s when I accepted that she was dead. Not because her mouth was closed and her hands were crossed over her chest but because the room was too still, too quiet, even with Mary and I talking. I’d never seen Mum so peaceful before.
‘She’ll be warm for a little while longer,’ Mary said softly. ‘They don’t go cold until about eight hours after they’ve passed.’
‘Can I hold her hand?’
She nodded her head and I lifted my mother’s hand from the duvet, cradling its sparrow’s weight.
‘I’ll leave you alone,’ Mary said, ‘I’ll be in the office if there’s anything you need.’ And then she was gone.
I don’t know how long I stayed in that room – ten minutes or ten hours – but it wasn’t long enough. Even after I’d said my goodbyes, even after I’d told Mum everything I wished I’d told her when she was alive, even after I’d run out of things to say and sat there with my head nestled into her side, her hand still in mine, it still wasn’t enough time. I wanted to stay there forever because I knew, the second I stepped out of that tiny eight by six room, that I’d never see her again.
At some point Mary appeared with a cup of tea. She pressed it wordlessly into my hands and made to move off but I called after her.
‘Yes?’ She turned back.
‘She didn’t have any visitors, did she? Mother. Her … nephew didn’t come back after the last time?’
She shook her head. ‘Your mother hasn’t had any visitors since you were last here. Were you expecting someone?’
Relief flooded through me. ‘No. No one.’
‘Have you told her?’ Brian presses a polystyrene cup into my hands and glances at Charlotte. ‘About her Nan?’
‘No,’ I take a sip of boiling tea, my eyes on my daughter’s sleeping face, ‘I want her to wake up thinking the world is a beautiful, safe place, not somewhere dark and sad.’
‘It’s not all darkness and sadness,’ Brian says, ‘though I understand why you’d say that given what’s happened but the world doesn’t have to be …’
I stop listening. Charlotte’s too afraid to wake up. I know she is. I’ve felt sure ever since I was told about the accident and now I know why. I was
so close
to finding out more about her blackmailer yesterday but then Mary rang and I sped off in my car leaving Keisha peering out through the front room blinds. I couldn’t tell if she was relieved I was leaving, or scared.
I’ve texted her four times since I left yesterday and called twice but I haven’t had a reply. I tried again, about five minutes ago, but her phone went straight to voicemail. I’m sure there’s a rational explanation – the ankle, an extended trip to A&E, changing her mind about going to the police – but it doesn’t matter which excuse I feed myself, I still can’t unknot the tight twist in my stomach. Something’s happened. Something terrible.
‘What’s up?’
I jump at the sound of Brian’s voice.
‘You’re not still blaming yourself for what happened to your mum, are you?’
I shake my head but I’m astonished at how insightful he can be. Right sentiment, wrong person.
‘I need to go,’ I say. ‘There’s something very important I need to do.’
Brian nods and reaches for his newspaper. ‘Your mum would be proud of you, Sue.’
‘And you’re quite sure?’ I say into the phone as I park outside Keisha’s flat and turn off the engine. ‘You’re quite sure that’s she’s gone to Ireland?’
‘You tell me.’ Danny sounds irritated. ‘You were the last one to see her. What the hell did you say?’
I can’t work out if he’s genuinely concerned or worried that I told her about his infidelity with the blonde.
‘Nothing.’
‘You promised me, Sue. When I gave you Keisha’s address you promised me you wouldn’t say anything.’
‘I know, and I didn’t.’ And not because of any misplaced sense of loyalty to him. ‘How did she sound the last time you spoke to her?’
‘We didn’t speak. She texted about midnight last night to say she was going back to Ireland for a bit because she was homesick. I was asleep and didn’t get the message until this morning. I tried ringing her but she wouldn’t pick up. I’ve rung three more times since …’ he tails off. ‘I’ve tried the bar manager, her mates and her flatmate but no one knows anything. None of them have seen her since you did. Are you sure you didn’t accidentally let something slip?’
‘No,’ it comes out curter than I meant it to. ‘You weren’t even mentioned, Danny.’
That’s a lie, but I’m not about to tell him
why
Keisha mentioned his name or what it was in reference to.
There are no lights on in her flat and the blinds in the living room are still drawn. I crouch down, holding onto the flowerpot by the front door for support and peer through the letter box. The concrete makes my knees ache.
‘But—’ Danny says.
‘I’m sure she’ll be in touch,’ I reply as a shadow crosses the hallway and my heart leaps with relief. ‘And if I hear from her I’ll let you know.’
‘Will you?’ He sounds genuinely desperate. ‘I’d appreciate that.’
I tuck my phone back into my handbag and peer through the stained-glass panels in the door.
‘Keisha?’ I knock heavily. ‘Keisha, it’s Sue again.’
There’s no reply.
I wait a few seconds then knock again. I’m just about to shout through the letter box when the door opens an inch and a face I don’t recognize peers out at me.
‘Hello?’ says a woman with a violent red bob and a blunt fringe. I immediately recognize her from the photograph in the front room. She stares up at me with big, critical green eyes, her long tangerine-coloured fingernails wrapped around the door. ‘Can I help you?’
‘You must be Keisha’s flatmate?’ I glance into the hallway. ‘Is she in?’
She shakes her head. ‘She’s gone.’
I detect something unusual about her accent, an intonation that isn’t English. Polish perhaps. ‘Do you know where?’
‘Ireland.’
Maybe Danny was right. Maybe she has pulled a disappearing act. ‘Do you know when she left?’
Her flatmate shakes her head. ‘No. She left a note. On the fridge. It just says “Gone to Dublin”, that’s it.’
‘Would you mind if I popped into her room before I go?’ I say as a thought strikes me. ‘I lent her a book that I need back quite urgently.’
She gives me a look. ‘You tell me the name. I find it.’
‘Well, the thing is I also need …’ I don’t know what to say. I need to see Keisha’s room. I don’t know what I’m expecting to see but, no matter how many people tell me she’s gone back to Ireland, I can’t shake the feeling that something has happened to her, ‘… to look for another book,’ I finish weakly. ‘There was one she recommended to me but I can’t remember the title. She did describe it to me though so I’m sure I’ll be able to find it really easily. I’ll be in and out in less than a minute, I swear.’
The flatmate looks me up and down. ‘Who are you?’
‘Sue. Sue Jackson.’
She shakes her head and closes the door ever so slightly. ‘Keisha never mentioned you before.’
‘That’s because we’ve only recently become friends. She’s knows my daughter better. Charlotte, perhaps you’ve met her?’
‘Charlotte?’ Her face lights up. ‘Pretty Charlotte who get hit by a bus?’
‘Yes,’ I say. ‘That’s my daughter.’
‘Oh gosh.’ Compassion floods her face and she throws the door open wide. ‘Of course you must come in. Anything I can do to help you let me know.’
On first glance Keisha’s room doesn’t look all that dissimilar from Charlotte’s. There are photos of half naked men on the walls, the chest of drawers is crowded with perfume bottles, hair products and make-up and clothes are strewn over every available surface. Unlike Charlotte’s room there’s a clothes horse in the corner, decorated with drying underwear – bras, knickers, basques, suspenders – in every conceivable fabric, colour and cut. It makes my drawer of M&S five packs and lace-trimmed black and white bras look positively pensionable.
‘She’s so messy,’ her flatmate, who introduced herself as Ester five minutes ago, comments from behind me. ‘She never do the washing up, always leaving cups and plates in living room but I like live with her.’
Keisha’s room looks like an explosion in a clothes factory but there’s a suitcase and several overnight-type bags stuffed on the top of the wardrobe and her hairbrush, deodorant can, perfume bottles and black satin make-up bag – with pencils, lipsticks and concealers spilling out – are fighting for space on the top of her chest of drawers.
I look at Ester. ‘Is her toothbrush still in the bathroom?’
She raises her eyebrows. ‘You want to borrow that too?’
‘No, but it doesn’t look like Keisha has packed anything for her trip home and I was wondering if she left her toothbrush.’
The look on Ester’s face changes from bemused to worried. ‘I check the bathroom.’
Whilst she’s gone I step through the magazines, bills, bank statements and clothing on the floor and approach her chest of drawers. I glance back towards the hallway then yank open the top drawer. More paperwork and bills. I slide them to one side and discover a rabbit-shaped vibrator, several tangled necklaces, a broken watch and a pair of hair straighteners. I feel like a burglar ransacking her things but I need to … ah! I swoop down on something maroon and leathered, peeping out from beneath an old Christmas card.
‘What you doing?’ Ester stares at me from the doorway, a blue toothbrush in her hand, a horrified expression on her face.
‘It’s Keisha’s passport.’ I pull the book from the drawer and flick through it, looking for the date stamp and photo then hold it towards Ester. ‘Look, it doesn’t expire for three years. How would she get back to Ireland without it? You can’t get in with just a driving licence these days.’
‘But …’ She shakes her head. ‘Why say she go home in her note?’
‘I don’t know.’ I look at the toothbrush in her hand. ‘But wherever she did go, she went there in a hurry.’
‘Alright, Mrs Jackson,’ Ella doesn’t look the slightest bit surprised to see me as she opens her front door. ‘Mum’s in the back. Want me to get her?’
I shake my head. ‘Actually it was you I was hoping to talk to. Is there somewhere we can go?’
‘Let’s go to the park.’ She glances back into the hall. ‘I’ll just grab my coat.’
The front door closes and I hear her shout something about popping to the corner shop and then she reappears in front of me, a crisp ten-pound note in her hand.
She grins. ‘Mum asked me to get her some fags while I was out.’
‘If this is about the phone,’ Ella says as we sit down on a weather-worn bench on the edge of Queen’s Park, ‘then you’re wrong if you think I nicked it. I didn’t. I only had it because me and Charlotte had a row at school, in the changing rooms after a games lesson. It was a couple of days before, you know …’
‘Her accident?’
‘Yeah. She left it behind on the bench when she called me a jealous cow and stormed off. I thought I’d keep it for a bit and make her freak out that she’d lost it but then she got hit by a bus.’ She peels the cellophane off her mother’s Marlboro Lights, tears off the foil and prises out a cigarette with her fingernails. ‘I didn’t want to give it to you because everyone would think I’d nicked it so I kept quiet. But then the stuff you said to me made me feel really guilty so I, you know …’
‘Posted it through our letterbox?’
‘Yeah.’
‘Thank you, Ella,’ I smile. ‘Really, thank you for telling the truth and giving the phone back. But that’s not why I’m here.’
She raises her eyebrows. ‘Really?’
‘Yes, I need to know who Mike is.’
‘Mike?’ She blinks as the wind changes direction and her exhaled smoke is blown back in her face. ‘How’d you know about him?’
‘Keisha told me.’
‘Oh.’ She rolls her eyes. ‘That figures.’
‘What does that mean?’
‘Nothing.’ She puts the cigarette to her lips again and inhales. She smokes like a fifty-year-old grandmother on forty a day.
‘Come on Ella, it’s not nothing.’
She tips back her head and exhales. ‘They’re just dicks, that’s all. Both of them. No wonder they hang around together.’
I frown. ‘He’s her friend?’
‘That or her minder.’ She laughs. ‘The only time they’re not together is when Keisha’s with Danny and that’s because he refuses to have him anywhere near him. He thinks Mike’s a creepy gay, which he is.’
‘A gay?’ I assume she means that in the derogatory sense.
‘Yeah,’ she glances at me, ‘you know, he likes men.’
What? That contradicts what Keisha told me last night. How can Mike have used a female prostitute and be a gay man? It doesn’t make sense. I look at the packet of cigarettes in Ella’s hands. There’s nothing I’d like more than to spark one up. Instead I cross my arms against the wind, tucking my hands under my armpits. ‘How well did Charlotte know him?’
‘Pretty bloody well!’ She gives me a sideways look. ‘You know, don’t you? That’s what this is all about? You’re pretending like you’re clueless but actually you’re trying to catch me out.’
‘Something like that …’ I say tentatively, knowing my lie could be discovered in a heartbeat.
‘Oh, thank God!’ She throws her spent cigarette at the ground then slumps back on the bench. ‘I thought about telling you, after what we talked about the last time you came round but Charlotte made me swear not to tell anyone. I mean, I know we’re not friends anymore but I’m no grass.’
‘I think this is a pretty unique situation, don’t you, Ella? Grassing someone up to their parents is a bit different if they’re on life support, right?’
‘Yeah.’ Her head drops and she fiddles with the toggles on her coat.