Read Midnight: The Second Jack Nightingale Supernatural Thriller Online

Authors: Stephen Leather

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Suspense, #Thrillers

Midnight: The Second Jack Nightingale Supernatural Thriller (28 page)

64

N
ightingale didn’t get a chance to talk to Jenny on her own until late at night, when everyone was heading for bed, except for Jenny’s father and Fairchild, who had gone out onto the terrace for a last cigar. She took him upstairs to show him his bedroom.

‘Why didn’t you tell me about Fairchild?’ he asked her as they walked down a corridor that seemed to stretch to infinity.

She frowned. ‘What do you mean?’

‘He represented my sister in court. How could you not tell me?’

‘I didn’t know until this evening,’ said Jenny. ‘You got whisked into dinner as soon as you arrived and I didn’t want to say anything in front of anybody.’

‘And you told him about the messages? About my sister going to Hell?’

‘I didn’t tell him about Alfie Tyler or Connie Miller, obviously.’

‘Obviously.’

‘Jack, what’s wrong?’

Nightingale fought the urge to snap at her. He took a deep breath and rubbed the back of his neck. ‘I don’t think you should have said anything.’

‘He was her lawyer. He knows her. He might be able to help. That’s what I thought. It came up in conversation, before you arrived. I wanted to tell you but we went straight into dinner and then after dinner you went outside with him for a smoke.’

‘I get that, but why would you tell him that people were telling me that she was going to Hell? Why’s that of any concern to him?’

‘He said that Robyn was disturbed a lot of the time. Unbalanced. He was asking about you, how you had reacted when you found out that she was your sister.’ She stopped in front of one of the doors. ‘This is yours,’ she said. ‘It’s the green room. Very restful.’

‘Yeah, I need restful,’ said Nightingale. ‘You told him that I’d been hearing voices, didn’t you?’

‘It wasn’t like that,’ said Jenny. She put a hand on his shoulder. ‘Jack, I’m on your side, you know that. Marcus was chatting away and he got me talking. That’s what he does, right? He’s a barrister. He gets people to open up, to reveal themselves.’ She took her hand away and folded her arms. ‘I’m not explaining this very well, am I?’

‘No, you’re not,’ he said. ‘That was personal, Jenny. And he’s a stranger.’

‘He’s an old friend of Daddy’s,’ she said. ‘I’ve known him for years. He’s not a stranger. Of course I wouldn’t have said anything to a stranger. But he’s Uncle Marcus. I’ve called him uncle for as long as I can remember.’

‘Did you tell him about the Ouija board?’

‘Of course not.’

‘You say “of course not”, but I don’t understand why you said anything about my sister in the first place.’

‘Why is that so important, Jack? What’s the problem?’

Nightingale opened the bedroom door and motioned for Jenny to follow him inside. She was right – it was restful, with pale green walls, a dark green carpet, and a large mahogany four-poster bed with fern-patterned linen. A fire was burning in a slate fireplace and there was a chocolate mint and a small posy of flowers on one of the pillows. Nightingale closed the door. ‘There’s something I didn’t tell you,’ he said. ‘Something that Wainwright told me when I went to see him at Biggin Hill. About Fairchild.’ Nightingale wiped his face with his hand and it came away wet with sweat. ‘He’s a Satanist. A devil-worshipper.’

‘Nonsense.’

‘I’m not making this up, Jenny. He’s a member of the Order of Nine Angles. And they believe in human sacrifice.’

‘Jack, why are you saying this? It can’t possibly be true.’

‘That’s what Wainwright told me.’

‘Then he’s lying.’

‘Why would he lie about something like that?’

‘People lie, Jack. You were a policeman so you know that people rarely tell the truth.’

‘I asked Wainwright for the name of someone in the Order of Nine Angles because that was the group that Gosling belonged to. He gave me Fairchild’s name.’

‘Why didn’t you tell me this before?’

‘Why should I? I didn’t know that he was a friend of your father’s. Or that he’d acted for my sister.’ He took out his cigarettes. ‘This is a mess.’ He put a cigarette between his lips.

‘Not in the house, Jack,’ said Jenny, putting a hand on his arm. ‘Mummy will freak out.’

‘How will she know?’ He pointed at the fireplace. ‘There’s a fire in the room.’

‘She can smell tobacco smoke a mile away, Jack. Please.’

‘What if I open a window?’

Jenny sighed. ‘Okay, but make sure all the smoke goes out.’

Nightingale went over to the window and opened it. In the distance were two tennis courts, one grass and the other with an orange synthetic surface. Both had a light dusting of frost.

Nightingale shivered and lit the cigarette. ‘What’s Mummy got against smokers anyway?’ he asked. He took a long drag and then leaned out of the window and blew smoke.

‘She used to be one,’ said Jenny. ‘She gave up about six years ago.’

‘The zeal of the convert,’ said Nightingale. ‘They’re the worst.’

‘I’m sorry,’ said Jenny.

‘About Mummy?’

Jenny forced a smile. ‘About talking to Fairchild. I can’t explain why I told him as much as I did.’

‘Maybe he hypnotised you,’ said Nightingale, only half joking.

‘Maybe,’ said Jenny. ‘He does have a way of looking right at you when he talks to you.’

‘Who mentioned my sister first?’ asked Nightingale.

‘He did.’

‘Are you sure?’

Jenny nodded. ‘I haven’t seen him for a couple of years and I was asking him about his cases. He mentioned he’d represented a serial killer. Then he said it was Robyn Reynolds. That’s when I said that you were her brother.’

Nightingale blew smoke through the window. ‘This is just plain weird,’ he said.

‘As opposed to everything else that’s happened over the past four weeks?’

‘Something’s going on, Jenny. This can’t be a coincidence. Wainwright gives me Fairchild’s name. Then I come to your parents’ house and here he is, large as life and twice as whatever. Then it turns out he represented my sister the serial killer.’ He rubbed the bridge of his nose. ‘This is giving me a headache.’

‘It could just be that, a coincidence.’ Nightingale could hear the uncertainty in her voice.

‘Which bit? Fairchild being on my sister’s legal team? Or him being a Satanist like my dear-departed father?’ He took a long pull on his cigarette, then blew smoke out through the open window. ‘I don’t get what’s happening here. I really don’t.’

‘I’ve known him for years, Jack. He’s not a bad person.’

‘Not according to Joshua Wainwright. He says that Fairchild belongs to the Order of Nine Angles. Have you any idea what they do?’ Jenny shook her head. ‘They kill people,’ he said quietly. ‘Now do you see? How can that be a coincidence? Marcus Fairchild is in a cult that kills people and he helps my sister plead guilty to the murder of five children.’ Nightingale stubbed out his cigarette on the window ledge, then closed the window. ‘Why’s he here, Jenny?’

‘He’s one of Daddy’s oldest friends.’

Nightingale took the cigarette butt through to the en-suite bathroom and flushed it away. He shrugged. ‘I don’t know what to think,’ he said. He looked at his watch. It was just after midnight. ‘Let’s talk about it tomorrow. Cold light of day and all that.’

‘You know we’re all going shooting after breakfast? Shooting on Christmas Day is a family tradition.’

‘So I gathered.’

‘It’ll be fun.’

‘I hope so,’ said Nightingale.

65

W
hen Nightingale went down to breakfast on Christmas morning, Jenny and her father were already in the dining room, with Marc and Sally Allen and Wendy Bushell. Everyone was casually dressed. Jenny’s father was wearing a red sweater with green Christmas trees across the front. Food was laid out in silver serving dishes – scrambled and fried eggs, bacon, sausages, baked beans, tomatoes, grilled kippers and kedgeree – along with fresh fruit and a selection of cereals.

‘Help yourself, Jack,’ said Jenny. ‘They’ll get you toast from the kitchen if you want it.’

Jack was carrying three wrapped presents. He handed one to Jenny. ‘Merry Christmas,’ he said.

‘Jack, you didn’t have to get me anything,’ she said. ‘You really shouldn’t have.’

‘Wait until you’ve opened it,’ he said. ‘I’m terrible at gifts.’ He handed a wrapped box to McLean. ‘I think I’m on safer ground with this one,’ he said. ‘And this one’s for Melissa.’ He put the present on the table.

‘Really, Jack, you didn’t have to.’ McLean pulled off the wrapping and beamed when he saw the Laphroaig box. ‘Good choice, Jack,’ he said. ‘Thanks.’

A uniformed maid appeared and asked if Nightingale wanted tea or coffee. He asked for coffee and then filled his plate. ‘I don’t suppose you fancy adopting me,’ Nightingale said to McLean. ‘I am an orphan, you know.’

Jenny finished unwrapping her present and held up a Louis Vuitton shoulder bag. ‘Thank you, Jack. It’s lovely.’

‘I’ve kept the receipt if you want to change it.’

‘It’s perfect, thank you.’ The maid appeared with a pot of coffee and two toast racks, one full of white toast and the other wholemeal. She placed the toast on the table and poured coffee for Nightingale.

McLean looked over at Nightingale as he buttered a slice of toast. ‘Jenny tells me you’re a decent shot, Jack,’ he said.

Nightingale raised an eyebrow at Jenny. ‘She did, did she?’ He took a sip of coffee. ‘I’m afraid shotguns aren’t my thing. I’m happier with an MP5 and a Glock.’

‘I’m not sure how sporting it would be to shoot pheasants with an MP5,’ said Allen.

‘You know, the birds would have more of a chance against a carbine,’ said Nightingale. ‘A nine-millimetre bullet is relatively small, but the spread from a shotgun at fifty feet would be – what, six feet? Eight?’

‘It’s not as bad as that,’ said McLean. ‘The general rule of thumb is that shot spreads about an inch for every yard it travels. So if you were shooting at a bird fifty feet away the spread would be about one and a half feet. I have to say, that would be pushing it, Jack. I wouldn’t want to be shooting at a bird more than thirty feet away.’

‘I would guess Jack is more used to sawn-off shotguns than Purdeys,’ said Marcus Fairchild. Nightingale looked up in surprise. He hadn’t heard the lawyer come into room. Fairchild bent down over the server containing kippers and smelled them appreciatively. He was wearing a dark blue pullover, baggy blue jeans and Timberland boots and looked more like a building site labourer than a City lawyer. ‘The spread of a sawn-off is about one inch per foot travelled,’ he said.

‘Come on, Marcus,’ said Sally Allen. ‘How would you know something like that?’

Fairchild picked up a plate and used silver tongs to take two kippers. ‘It was a case at the Old Bailey a few years back,’ he said. ‘I was defending an armed robber who’d been charged with attempted murder. He was twenty-five feet away from the woman when he pulled the trigger.’

‘He shot a woman?’ said Allen. ‘He shot a woman at point-blank range and you defended him?’

Fairchild waved a languid hand in the air. ‘First, anyone is entitled to the best defence they can get.’ He smiled. ‘Or at least, the best defence they can afford. And this chap had a lot of money hidden away. And second, the point we made was that twenty-five feet isn’t point-blank range. Far from it. The shot would have spread out over more than two feet and almost certainly wouldn’t have been fatal. My client was something of an expert with a sawn-off so we argued that there was no intention to kill.’

‘He got off?’ asked Allen.

‘Three years, out in just under two,’ said Fairchild. ‘My client was not dissatisfied.’

‘I remember the case,’ said Nightingale. ‘The cashier was in a wheelchair, right?’

‘I’m afraid so, yes,’ said Fairchild, deftly filleting a kipper with a surgeon’s skill. ‘She was unlucky.’

‘I’m not sure how much luck comes into it,’ said Nightingale. ‘Your client was a career criminal and she was a cashier. He pointed a shotgun at her and pulled the trigger. He made a calculated decision. Luck is something out of our control.’

‘Agreed,’ said Fairchild.

‘Do you think two years was a fair punishment, for what he did?’

Fairchild laughed harshly; the sound was like the bark of an attack dog. ‘Fair?’ he said. ‘We’re talking about the law. The law isn’t fair. If it was fair there’d be no need for lawyers.’

Mrs McLean breezed in and picked up a glass of orange juice. ‘Not shop talk again, Marcus. You have been told about that.’

Fairchild held up his knife and fork. ‘I plead guilty, m’lord, and throw myself on the mercy of the court.’

‘My fault, I’m afraid,’ said Allen. ‘I put him in the witness box.’

Mrs McLean looked at her watch. ‘The beaters will be gathering in about thirty minutes,’ she said.

‘It’ll give me time to show Jack my Purdeys,’ said Jenny.

‘You’ve got your own shotgun?’

‘Guns,’ she said. ‘Daddy got me a pair for my eighteenth birthday.’

‘Made to measure,’ said McLean. ‘But she barely uses them.’

Jenny pushed back her chair and stood up. ‘Come on, Jack. You can give me your professional opinion.’

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