The Dead Dog Day (14 page)

Read The Dead Dog Day Online

Authors: Jackie Kabler

BOOK: The Dead Dog Day
10.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He was quite looking forward to this trip – he'd had a quiet Christmas, for him, and he was feeling in need of an adrenaline fix. It was just a five day shoot, but it should be fun – a husky safari through one of the few real wildernesses left in Europe, the forests and frozen lakes of western Lapland. The temperatures could drop as low as minus twenty-five, and the crew would be staying in wood cabins at night with no running water, toilets or electricity, but he could cope with that for a few days. In fact, he couldn't wait. It would be a bit of a challenge, and he needed one. He hadn't been feeling very happy recently – lonely sometimes, if he was honest, despite his exciting job and big circle of acquaintances – and he didn't like it. Maybe a serious blast of cold air would sort him out.

He wandered into the depths of his walk-in wardrobe to find his thermal long johns and gloves. As he emerged, he glimpsed a familiar face on the TV that was burbling away quietly across the room, and to his surprise his stomach did a small but unmistakeable back flip. He reached for the remote and turned the volume up. On the vast screen, Cora Baxter was chatting animatedly to a plump woman in a chavvy-looking kitchen. Benjamin sat down slowly on the bed. Hell, she was looking good. Stunning in fact. Her swishy bob swung around her chin as she turned back to the camera, her green eyes sparkling, a tight red top emphasising her curves. She handed back to the studio and was gone, and the weatherman popped up instead, white teeth flashing in his luminous face.

Instantly bored, Benjamin turned away from the screen, and then chuckled softly to himself as he remembered their brief meeting. She'd been flustered and acted a little strangely, but there had definitely been something there. He snapped his suitcase shut, stood up and pointed at himself in the mirror.

‘You, Boland,' he said firmly. ‘You are going to go to Lapland, and then you're going to come back and go on a date with Cora Baxter. Deal?'

The face in the mirror grinned back at him. ‘Deal!' it said.

18

‘So no, I didn't bloody kill Jeanette. In case you're wondering.'

Scott banged his mug down and glared at his colleagues.

‘Scott! Of course we weren't wondering. Don't be ridiculous,' Cora said soothingly.

‘Honestly, mate, as if!' Nathan reached out and squeezed Scott's shoulder, while Rodney shook his head and smiled sympathetically.

‘Well – thanks. That means a lot,' said Scott, sounding somewhat mollified. ‘I wish the cops had as much faith in me though. They've told me they'll want to speak to me again, you know, after ‘further enquiries'. Elaine's in bits. Me, questioned for murder, just because I thumped a lift! I only did it because that woman pissed me off so much.'

The others looked at each other and grimaced. Poor Scott. They'd all been horrified over New Year to hear that their friend had been questioned about Jeanette's murder, and desperate to hear the details. Finally back on the road together today, they'd had the blow-by-blow account, and while none of them thought Scott was remotely capable of murder, it seemed his little show of temper as he left the
Morning Live
studios had raised police suspicions.

‘So, what further enquiries are they making? Did they tell you?' asked Cora, and took another bite of her sausage sandwich. They'd all stopped at a little roadside café for breakfast after the morning's lives, and as usual she was starving.

‘Dunno,' said Scott sullenly. ‘Told them I drove straight off and never came back to the building, which I didn't. They have my reg details, so I s'pose they'll look at traffic camera footage or something. I dunno. I'm just pissed off with the whole thing. I'm going. See you tomorrow, unless I'm in bloody jail or something.'

He pushed his egg-smeared plate away angrily and stood up, chair scraping loudly on the grubby tiles, then slouched out of the café without another word, letting the door slam behind him.

‘Phew-wee.' Nathan leaned back in his red plastic chair and ran his fingers through his hair.

‘You don't think … do you?' Rodney pushed his glasses higher onto his nose, anxiety wrinkling his forehead.

‘No. No! Of course not. But something's going on.' Cora rubbed her temples. She could feel a stress headache brewing.

‘I mean, this business at his house, with all the antiques disappearing? Which none of us have had the guts to ask him about yet, have we?'

The boys shook their heads.

‘And he has been incredibly grumpy and acting quite strangely recently. And, let's face it, he was definitely edging closer to getting the sack – Jeanette was getting really fed up with him. So yes, something's very wrong with our Scott. But murder? No. No way.'

‘Agreed,' said Nathan. ‘But let's hope the cops decide he's innocent sooner rather than later. He's already on the edge, and I dread to think what will happen if he tips over it.'

‘Oh, he's putting his socks in his pudding now! Elliot! Stop it, that's not very nice, is it?'

Elliot giggled and Zoë, his nanny, shook her head good-naturedly and pushed his high chair back from the table, out of reach of his bowl of fruit and yoghurt. She grabbed his wiggling feet, peeled off his now soggy little green socks, and waved them at Cora, who was flicking through a newspaper across the table.

‘Cora, would you mind keeping an eye on him for just a minute? Nicole's still in the shower and I'll have to go and rinse these out – the yoghurt will start to stink if I leave them in the washing basket.'

Cora, who'd popped round to see Nicole for a rare mid-week visit, reached out and tickled Elliot's toes, and he kicked his feet and shrieked with delight.

‘Course I'll keep an eye on him – little monkey. I wouldn't worry about it though – you know what a state Nicole's clothes get in at work. That washing basket could probably walk off on its own, a bit of yoghurt's nothing!'

‘I know, but I'll do it anyway. Back in a mo!' She tousled Elliot's dark curls and he gazed after her as she headed for the utility room. Young and pretty in a freshly scrubbed, no make-up kind of way, Zoë had been Elliot's nanny since he was six weeks old. He adored her, to the extent that Cora – and sometimes even Nicole – got quite jealous, but Zoë was such a sweet, down to earth girl and Nicole and Will relied on her so much that they willingly put up with sharing the little boy's affections.

Cora got up, grabbed a wet wipe from the pack on the table and brandished it at Elliot.

‘Right, mucky mush, give me that face!'

The toddler grimaced as she scrubbed at the tomato sauce, fish finger crumbs, and yoghurt smeared across his cheeks, then beamed and held up his arms for a cuddle. Cora unstrapped him from his chair and hauled him out, kissing his damp pink nose.

‘Gorgeous boy.'

She held him close, and his chubby little arms wrapped tightly round her neck. Cora waltzed around the kitchen with him, humming softly, and he snuggled in, his head heavy on her shoulder. She loved Elliot so much, but sometimes she preferred to cuddle him when nobody else was around, just to avoid the inevitable ‘oh, you're so good with him, I can't believe you're not having your own' comments. To Cora though, enjoying a cuddle with a cute kid was a million miles away from actually wanting to give birth to one. It drove her mad that even her close friends still gave each other knowing looks when they saw her with a small child – almost as mad as when people said, pityingly, ‘and who's going to look after
you
when you're old?'. As Cora delighted in pointing out, nursing homes were full of old people who never had visits from their children, because they'd fallen out or emigrated or just couldn't be bothered. In Cora's view, it was much safer to work hard, save your money and provide for yourself in your old age – and what a selfish reason to have children, just so you could have a more comfortable retirement …

‘Right, young man, it's nearly seven o'clock and I make that bath time!'

Zoë bustled back into the room and Cora, startled out of her reverie, reluctantly relinquished her charge.

‘Thanks, Cora, you're a star. Nicole said she'll be down in a minute, and to help yourself to the wine in the fridge. I'm going to bathe Elliot and put him to bed before I go home, so you two can catch up. See you soon – say goodnight to Auntie Cora, Elliot!'

Cora planted a kiss on the little boy's head. ‘Night night, darling.'

‘N'night,' squeaked Elliot, and flapped both hands at her in his cute toddler wave.

Cora waved back until he'd disappeared down the hall, poured herself a small glass of wine in case her work phone rang later and sank down at the table again. Wearily, she glanced at her BlackBerry. No messages. She'd tried contacting
@a-friend
, aka Justin, several times since their Christmas Eve encounter but he'd never replied, leaving Cora deeply uneasy. It was impossible to shake the constant feeling of anxiety she'd had ever since the day of Jeanette's murder – the horrible knowledge that the killer was very probably somebody she knew, that it was highly unlikely that some random stranger had managed to slip in and out of the newsroom unnoticed. Justin's silence was making everything worse, her mind swinging wildly from complete faith in the innocence of a man she knew so well, to extreme doubt. She was still pushing the doubts viciously from her head, but she wasn't sure how long she'd be able to keep that up. It was becoming exhausting.

She sighed heavily and tried to think more positively. It would be nice to have a few hours of quality time with Nicole. Will had already headed off to the local pub for a snooker night with the lads, so it would be just the two of them, something that didn't happen very often.

Nicole and Will lived in a beautifully restored Grade II listed cottage two miles outside Cheltenham. Dating back to 1830, it had all the character you would expect – an inglenook fireplace, beams, flagstone floors – but Nicole had managed to combine its country charm with contemporary décor, so for a building with such small windows and low ceilings it had a surprisingly bright and modern feel about it.

As in every good cottage, the kitchen was the heart of the home, and they rarely sat anywhere else on their girls' nights in. It was a big messy room, every surface always liberally scattered with toy bricks, cars and children's books, but with its massive oak table and grey leather sofa, the squishiest Cora had ever sat on, it was the perfect place to sprawl, especially in winter when the heat thrown out by the shiny cream Aga meant you rarely needed to wear anything much warmer than a T-shirt.

Cora, already heating up, slipped off her cardigan and sipped her wine sleepily. She was just getting stuck into an article on the latest suspected terrorist arrests in Birmingham when Nicole wandered in, knotting the belt of her black velvet dressing gown, looking fresh-faced and rosy after her shower.

‘That's better! I was reeking – had a dog with chronic diarrhoea today and I didn't get out of the way fast enough!' She tittered. ‘Oh, sorry – we're not supposed to mention diarrhoea, are we?'

‘Ha bloody ha.'

Nicole tipped a bag of crisps into a bowl, sloshed some wine into a glass and slumped onto the sofa. ‘And then …'

She paused to take a slurp.

‘I got home to find Elliot wandering around naked because he'd just climbed into the loo and Zoë had had to strip him off, and while she was shoving his clothes in the wash he did a great big poo right in the middle of the dining room floor, which I walked straight into!'

Cora groaned. Nicole ignored her. ‘So I had dog diarrhoea all over my jeans and baby poo on my shoes and …

‘Tra la la la LA LA LA …' Cora stuck her fingers in her ears and sang loudly and tunelessly.

Nicole laughed. ‘OK, OK, I'll stop! Come on, tell me your news, then. I don't seem to have any that doesn't include bodily functions.'

‘Thank goodness for that.'

Cora pushed her chair back and came to join Nicole on the sofa.

‘Well – not a lot going on really. Things are really odd, with the murder enquiry, and all this Scott stuff. Although he seemed in a better mood today, thank goodness.'

Nicole selected a crisp from the bowl in between them and pondered.

‘A date, that's what you need, young lady. Cheer you up, stop you mooning over Justin. Nothing serious, just a bit of fun. Come on – what about the hot cop? Sounds like there's chemistry there, from what you've said?'

Cora held up her hands. ‘No, stop right there – not even in the running. He has a child he sees at weekends. Way too much baggage. So no point in even going there, sadly.' She pouted and got up to refill their glasses.

Nicole held hers out. ‘It's what you're going to find more and more though, Cora, you know that don't you? At our age, all the single men either have baggage, or they're single for a reason, cos they're peculiar! It's highly unlikely you're going to find many men in their late thirties or early forties who are attractive, intelligent, and normal,
and
still single. I know you don't want your own kids, but you might have to compromise and put up with one being around now and again. Is that such a big deal? I mean, you actually quite like some kids, don't you?'

Cora sat down again. ‘I do, yes. But I think it is a big deal, Nicole. I fully intend to join the long list of women in history who lived life happily and successfully while being totally child-free.'

Nicole wrinkled up her nose. ‘OK – name five, then!'

Cora rubbed her hands together. ‘Easy! Jane Austen. Coco Chanel. Oprah Winfrey. Er … Barbara Windsor. Amelia Earhart. See – all successful, all talented, all normal, all
with no kids
!'

Nicole laughed and poked Cora in the ribs. ‘Only you could have a list like that to hand. Alright, point taken, nutter.'

Other books

Blood Crown by Ali Cross
Summer's End by Kathleen Gilles Seidel
Black Run by Antonio Manzini
Hexbound by Neill, Chloe
Taking Chances by Amanda Lukacs
The Mare by Mary Gaitskill
Ana Seymour by A Family For Carter Jones
The Mahabharata by R. K. Narayan