All the Things You Are (36 page)

Read All the Things You Are Online

Authors: Declan Hughes

‘I had a PI investigate. There were two Bradberry brothers who had left home. One was a petty criminal in Cicero. He's dead now, murdered. The other had done time for statutory rape in Racine, then became a high-end rent boy, then reinvented himself as this kind of businessman with a lot of serious security and political connections. Wilson, he goes by now. Turns out his business is murder. He runs the hit man who's doing the work for us. He doesn't know why I chose him, but when it's all done, you can tell him.'

Dee opens the passenger door and slips down to the ground and vomits. When she's finished, her hands scrabbled by the gravel in the drive, her throat sore and eyes streaming, she looks up and sees Dave staring at her as if she is a bug on a pin.

‘That's exactly what you did when I told you Danny burnt your family to death,' he says.

There is a footfall from the side of the house, and then a man in a red coat and a Wisconsin Badgers hat appears, with Barbara and Irene Brogan tethered to him.

‘Ready?' Dave says.

Dee breathes in deeply. There is no way back now. And she is not someone else: this is who she is. Her brother. Her blood. She had all the clippings out again today, just like every Halloween. Even if she says she has no memory, no trauma, there is something there, some reptile stirring deep within her. Is it rage? Colder than that. The sense that she is entitled to revenge – not blood revenge, not heated and delirious, but a revenge that is her due. Maybe not revenge so much as logic, a necessary end to it all. She knows when it comes to it, she won't feel a thing. She never really does. She has spent so long pretending to feel emotions she has never experienced. She is a better actress than Claire, of that there is no doubt. She has been acting all her life. She lets Dave extend his arm and help her rise. She looks him in the eye, holds his hands in hers.

‘Why are you doing this, Dave?' she says.

‘Because …' he begins, and turns away, turns away and looks at his reflection in the glass of his side window.

Because.

Because Dave thought Danny would be grateful that he'd thrown the fire bottle, grateful that he'd burnt the Bradberry house down, grateful that he'd relieved him of his tormentor. Dave thought the guys would be on his side, and Danny would be grateful: grateful then, grateful forever. For the briefest of moments, after the house had gone up in flames, and they had revived Danny and ran, ran through the Halloween streets, for one brief, glorious, exhilarating moment, Dave had felt like a hero, like a star. And then, as the guys' fear and panic filtered through, he understood that he had got it wrong, that they were appalled at what had happened. And a screen memory returned to him, a memory that would stay with him, the fleeting glimpse as he turned from the blazing house of the two young Bradberry children in the upstairs window. And even he knew that wasn't right. And without sharing in the panic or the fear, he quickly saw what he had to do. It was simple: he and Gene had swapped costumes, so he was wearing the same letter as Danny. And who had more incentive to take the ultimate revenge on Jackie Bradberry? And since Danny had knocked himself out, there would be a moment he couldn't account for.

Ralph never put that in his fucking book, did he?

‘Jesus, Danny, why'd you do it?' was all Dave had to say.

Because it was Danny's fault, wasn't it? Danny's fault Dave had felt the need to protect him, to help him, even though Danny had never asked him, had never trusted him to step in with Jackie Bradberry the way he had with Gene. Danny's fault they had been there at all.

Things were never the same between them afterwards. There were many times Dave had wanted to tell him, to explain. But what would he have said? That he had done it, then blamed Danny? No, he had to keep it hidden, even as Danny drifted away.

And Dave has had to live with it all these years, until fate brought Claire Bradberry his way, brought her his way and then took her away again. Fate in the form of Danny Brogan.

‘Because Danny Brogan made your life a misery,' he says, tears in his eyes suddenly, brimming himself, hands shaking. ‘And destroyed the happiness we should have had. And now he is going to pay.'

Dee looks at Dave, and nods, and kisses him quickly, a brush on the cheek really. She is in it with him, and she will see it through. And then, at last, she will be free of him. Free of it all. Dee opens the car door and makes her excited-to-see-you face and runs across the lawn toward the children as if she is their friend, sent to rescue them from harm.

I'm Beginning to See the Light

D
etective Nora Fox has worked her way through the cuttings on Dee St Clair's table, which document the Bradberry fire of thirty-five years ago, and include references to the girl that got away, the three-year-old daughter who alone survived the inferno. She has found paper photocopies of a number of paintings in different styles, but all with the same image: two small children, their faces rigid with fear, in the window of a house, flames encroaching upon them.

Turning to Dee's laptop, she has found within her email program folders that seem to be set up for Danny Brogan and Claire Taylor; indeed, while she is inspecting them, an email arrives for Claire, asking if her drama class on Wednesday is definitely on, only Jenna has extra French and may have to skip the last half-hour. Nora doesn't know how you do this – she has a notion there's something called a Trojan, a rogue program that infiltrates another computer and relays the data so a third party can spy on it, and if necessary, manipulate it. The Forensic Services Unit have enough technical expertise to figure it out. But however you do it, it's been done, and it's on Dee's computer.

Nora runs through it in her head. The Four Horsemen – Danny Brogan, Dave Ricks, Gene Peterson and Ralph Cowley – may have had some involvement with the Bradberry fire. From the information she got from Cass Epstein at the Department of Children and Families, it seems certain that Dee St Clair is Claire Bradberry, the surviving child. Judging by the news clippings, she has not forgotten what happened to her birth family.

Nora studies the pictures of the children with the flames flicker-ing around the window. There's a tiny signature in the bottom right corner of each, not even a signature, just initial letters. The second letter is R, the first … could be an O, could be a closed C … could be a D. D-R … Dave Ricks.

She goes back to the computer and enters Dave Ricks in the Search box and reads the three most recent emails. Halfway through the third, she is on the phone.

‘Fowler?'

‘Ken, you're still there.'

‘I was on my way home. But everyone's on the streets for Freakfest, I'm like a one-man band here.'

‘Don around? I can't raise him.'

‘He's still here somewhere.'

‘OK, well, grab him and sit on him, I'll be back in fifteen. I think the Brogan case is breaking, and it's gonna be tonight. And Ken, tell Don we could be talking emergency response here.'

‘I'll tell him.'

Nora looks again at the final email Dave Ricks sent Dee St Clair. The last lines read:

We'll keep it loose, improvising from scene to scene – because they're human, and we don't know how they're going to act – but if we can get everyone there at once, well, what a grand finale there will be! What a fitting anniversary, what a Halloween spectacular!

Me, Myself and I

‘D
onna's just texted,' Claire says, voice thick and teary with relief. They're on the 12-18, about five miles out from Cambridge. ‘She says the girls are fine, to come on over.'

‘Well then,' Danny says. ‘That's what we'll do. And let's hope the Madison police are nowhere near.'

‘They don't know about Donna, do they?'

‘I don't think anyone knows about Donna. Donna flies under the radar. I'm not even sure what name she calls herself these days.'

‘She went back to Brogan,' Claire says.

‘Did she? How do you know?'

‘I saw some mail in her house when I dropped the kids off, a few months back. Funny thing was, she saw me notice it, and she kind of shrugged, and she said something pretty cool, or at least, I think it's pretty cool now, at the time I don't think I really got it.'

‘What did she say?'

‘She said, at a certain stage, you stop trying to be someone else. You're who you are. You're yourself, the sum total of all you've done and been all your life. And what you've got to do is, accept it. And you know something, Dan, that's what I feel now. And one of the things I'm going to do, at last, maybe I've been running away from it, in denial or whatever they say, I'm going to look at my adoption papers. I'm going to find out who my birth parents were. Not saying I want to meet up with them or anything, that might be a whole other trip. But … just so I know. Because I am who I am. And it's going to be all right.'

It's never going to be all right
, Danny thinks. He hasn't told Claire any of it yet. The fact that Dave Ricks threw the fire bottle, not Danny. The fact that Dee is connected to Dave, used to be married to him. They have to be behind it all, the blackmail, the murder. They have to be behind it. But whatever they're behind, they can't change the facts. And the facts are, Claire's birth certificate proves she was born Claire Bradberry. He has to tell her. He has to tell her now.

‘Claire, there's something I need to say to you. About … about the Bradberry fire.'

‘The Bradberry fire? Wow. Which one was that again, where all the kids got killed?'

Which one was that again?
He looks around at his wife, her innocent eyes shining now, this wife of his that he's not even married to, and drinks in every detail. This may be the last time she ever smiles at him.

And then his phone rings. Does he answer it? Of course he does.

‘We know you didn't kill anyone, Danny.'

‘I'm sorry? Who is this?'

‘Detective Nora Fox, Madison PD.'

‘Why didn't you say so?'

‘I didn't want you to hang up on me. When I say we know, I mean we have compelling evidence that the murders were carried out on behalf of Dave Ricks and Dee St Clair.'

‘That's what I figured, except without much in the way of evidence.'

‘There's an immediate danger to your own safety, and to that of your family, sir. There's reason to suspect some attempt may be made to intercept you, or in some way harm you. You're not considering a return to the house on Arboretum Avenue, are you? If you can let us know where you're at, we can arrange officer escorts.'

‘That sounds serious.'

‘I believe it is serious.'

Danny considers, but still doesn't fully trust the cops.

‘We're fine, Detective. We're all meeting up at my … the whole family's meeting up.'

‘I want to urge particular caution in relation to fire, sir.'

‘Fire?'

‘Yes. You know of course that it's the anniversary of the Bradberry fire tonight. We know that you, and Dave Ricks, and your other friends, including one of the deceased, Ralph Cowley, may have had some involvement with that incident.'

‘No comment.'

‘It's not a reinvestigation of the Bradberry fire, sir. It's, in the communications between Dave Ricks and Dee St Clair, several references are made to a blaze, to, if all the arrangements are correctly in place, a spectacular.'

A
spectacular.
The word sends a chill down Danny's spine. That's exactly what they called the Bradberry fire when they were planning it, back when it was a prank, before it became a catastrophe.

‘And there may be an element of revenge involved, sir. You see, there was one Bradberry child who escaped the inferno on that night in 1976. And we have conclusive proof that Dee St Clair was that child. Dee St Clair was born Claire Bradberry.'

‘No,' Danny says. ‘No, that's not true, I know that's not true.'

‘It is true, sir.'

Danny is aware that Claire is watching him closely. He can't stop now.

‘I've seen … documents … belonging to someone else. Stating that … someone else … is that person.'

‘Sir, Dee St Clair has been spying on you and your wife for many years now. She intercepts all of your emails, sometimes replying to them. It appears, as well as murder, she and Mr Ricks have been extorting money from you. It doesn't seem beyond her to have forged a birth certificate or two, does it?'

Detective Nora Fox is asking again where Danny is headed as he closes the call, palms his phone and stares at the screen, smiling like a man who has forgotten how it's done.

‘Who was that?' Claire says.

‘Nobody,' Danny says.

‘I see. And what did nobody want?'

‘Nothing.'

Danny reaches for Claire's hand. She takes his and squeezes it.

Nobody wanted nothing. After all these years.

And in spite of all that's happened and all that looms ahead, in spite of the danger and uncertainty, the heartache and the shame, Danny Brogan thinks that everything is going to be all right.

When No One Cares

D
ee has found the girls' Nintendo DS players and hugged Irene and tried to talk to Barbara and persuaded them that their parents are on their way back to the family home, the ‘forever house,' as Irene calls it. By ensuring that both Dave and Charlie, the scrawny Irish guy who clearly thinks the world of himself but looks to Dee like a weasel with bad teeth, keep completely out of sight, she manages to persuade the girls into the back of Dave's SUV. Then, having texted Claire on Donna's phone to let her know Barbara and Irene are waiting to be collected at Donna's house, she takes off for Madison.

Charlie T is stationed up at the gates of Donna's house, ready and waiting in a Halloween mask, a red El Diablo with horns. The only car visible in the drive is Donna's.

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