No Other Darkness (25 page)

Read No Other Darkness Online

Authors: Sarah Hilary

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Police Procedural, #Women Sleuths

22

You can smell him.

You smelt the same once. Scared. Leaking sweat and fear.

You’re sorry for him, somewhere under everything else.

But if he’s hurt them, you’ll kill him.

After everything you’ve done, all the lessons you drummed into him, the chances you gave him, the love.

Too much love
.

He’s had enough from you. Enough chances to grow up and
be a man.

You trusted him, because trust is important. You opened your home to him when he was a stranger, someone else’s problem. What were you thinking, really?

Did Esther teach you nothing?

You were trying to be a better man, a better father than you were for Fred and Archie, and Louisa. You were trying to be strong, to take care of them. To prove you could do that this time. But if they’re not safe, what’s it all for?

If he’s hurt them, you’ll kill him.

No more chances, no more lessons.

‘You could have someone’s eye out with this.’

Doesn’t he know how dangerous the world is?

He cuts up apples and leaves the knife on the draining board.

He takes the safety covers off plug sockets and forgets to put them back.

The wire coat hanger was the worst, though.

A
wire
coat hanger.

After everything you’d taught him. As if he was deliberately trying to provoke you, the way he does with his words, his eyes. You tolerated that, but this?

You had to show him enough was enough. You had to make him understand, in the way
you
never understood, before Esther. It’s for his own good, as well as theirs.

If he’s hurt them, you’ll kill him.

You wouldn’t hit a woman (couldn’t hit a woman), but he’s nearly a man and he can take care of himself, in a way you never could at his age.

You taught him to do that.

They send boys as young as ten to prison. He’s nearly fifteen, and he’s not been a child in years. You saw it in his eyes, the first time you met.

You cut him slack, a lot of it, because of those parents of his, but this is different.

This is your family.

If he’s hurt them, he’s dead.

23

Beth Doyle came into the station with Debbie Tanner. Carmen and Tommy were at their auntie’s house, with Beth’s sister. Neither child seemed traumatised, although Carmen still wouldn’t talk about what had happened between the park and Douglas Cole’s house, not even to confirm whether it was Clancy who took them to number 8.

Beth came to a standstill in the corridor, her eyes fixed on the windows of the interview room where Alison Oliver was sitting with her mother.

‘That’s her, isn’t it?’ she said. ‘That’s Esther Reid.’

Her stare was one part curiosity, nine parts terror.

Debbie said, ‘Come on. I’ll make us both a nice cup of tea.’

 • • • 

In the second interview room, Beth sat opposite Marnie. Her face was swollen by the stress of the last few hours. ‘I didn’t know,’ she said. ‘About Esther, or Terry, or the children. The dead boys . . . I didn’t know.’

‘We’re trying to find Terry,’ Marnie said, ‘and Clancy. And Mr Belloc, the victim care officer who was with Terry at the safe house. We need your help.’

‘How
can
I help?’ Beth’s voice rose in pitch. ‘I didn’t
know
anything! He didn’t tell me anything!’

‘It’s been very hard on you finding out like this. I am sorry.’ Marnie used her steadiest voice. ‘But I do think you can help, and we do
need
your help.’

Beth focused her eyes on Marnie, with difficulty. She jerked her head in a nod.

‘How was Terry when you first moved into the house? I know it was a busy time. Tommy was very little. Can you remember how Terry was?’

‘Happy. He was happy.’ Beth started to cry quietly, tears sliding from her eyes.

Marnie thought of Alison’s dry eyes in the room next door. She wondered what had attracted Matt to Esther, and then Terry to Beth. Was it simply that Beth was physically so different? Esther had been lovely once, and she was sharp, clever. Beth was pretty, but plain. Uncomplicated, at least on the surface. The two women had nothing obvious in common, other than that they’d married the same man.

‘He can’t have been happy,’ Beth said, ‘can he? That can’t have been any truer than the rest of it. He kept
everything
a secret from me . . . He can’t ever have been happy.’

‘I don’t think it was like that,’ Marnie said. ‘He’d changed his name. Sometimes that helps people to get better. You were helping him to get better. You and Carmen and Tommy.’

‘All that time he was looking for his boys . . .’

‘And he found them. Perhaps there was peace in that.’ Marnie picked up her mug of tea and drank, waiting while the other woman mirrored the action. It was hard to take this slowly, knowing what was at stake, but there was nothing to be gained by rushing Beth. ‘A fortnight ago, Terry heard from the police that Alison was coming out of prison.’

‘Alison. That’s what she calls herself now?’ Beth wiped at her eyes.

‘Yes. Do you remember anything that changed about Terry’s mood a fortnight ago? Was he was more . . . anxious, perhaps?’

‘Terry’s never anxious,’ Beth said mechanically, as if she was speaking by rote.

‘And when you were moved to the safe house, how was he then?’

She shook her head, not answering.

‘You told me Clancy was angry. Was Terry angry too?’

Beth didn’t look at her. ‘Terry’s never angry.’ Rote again.

‘Did he ever mention a man called Ian Merrick?’

‘No.’ Beth pressed her mouth shut.

‘Ian Merrick,’ Marnie repeated. ‘He built the houses on Blackthorn Road. He employed Terry as a gardener sometimes.’

‘Terry never mentioned him.’

Marnie picked up her tea. The tannin set her teeth on edge, but it was a useful prop. Beth copied her, relaxing a fraction. ‘Tell me about Clancy. When did he come to live with you?’

‘Just after we moved to Blackthorn Road. His dad’s a friend of Terry’s. They were struggling with Clancy, he was acting up at home. He’d run off a couple of times. Terry offered to take care of him for a bit, to see if he could help him to settle down. He’s so good with kids.’ Her neck stained red. ‘We were going to foster him.’

‘But you’re not fostering him at the moment?’

‘Terry said it was best to tell people that was what we were doing, so we wouldn’t be asked awkward questions. He said Clancy was unsettled enough without that and we were
going
to foster him. Terry had organised the paperwork and everything. That’s what he said.’

‘Did you meet Terry’s friend, Scott? Clancy’s father.’

‘No . . .’

‘What about his mother, Christina?’

‘I never met either of them.’

‘Even though Scott was Terry’s friend?’

‘He didn’t have time for friends,’ Beth said. ‘To spend with friends, I mean.’

‘But he had time for Clancy.’

‘He made time. He wanted to help. It’s what he does. It’s
all
he does.’ Beth shut her eyes. Tears ran down her cheeks. ‘He’s a good dad. He
is
.’

‘He is,’ Marnie agreed. ‘Everyone tells us that. I’m sure it’s true.’

‘He was good with Clancy. He
tried
, he really did. Talking to him all hours. Making time for him. Teaching him about the garden, helping him at school . . . Some days Clancy would come home in a state because of something that’d happened, a fight or just a bad day, and Terry would go up to him, spend hours giving him a quiet talk. Talking him down. He didn’t have to give him so much time. He had our two, but he was always up there talking with Clancy, till all hours some nights.’

She wiped her nose with the back of her hand. ‘I told him to give up once. I said it was killing him, giving so much time to someone who didn’t appreciate it, but Terry wouldn’t give up, not on anyone. It’s the kind of man he is. He said Clancy reminded him of himself at that age.
Irresponsible
, that was the word he used. He said he wanted to help him be a better person. Stronger, more responsible. It was like . . . a
mission
. I left him alone after that. I could see he needed to help Clancy, even though I thought it was a lost cause. I
missed
him. Terry. All the time he spent up there in the attic . . . I wanted him back down with us.’

She moved her hands. ‘Not that he neglected us. It was never like that. It was usually after the children were in bed. It was only
him
who was neglected. There was nothing
left of him, some days. It was burning him up, being a dad to that boy on top of everything else.’

‘At the safe house,’ Marnie said, ‘earlier today. Did Terry tell you he was going to leave?’

‘I was sleeping. I didn’t know he’d gone until I woke up and they told me.’

‘Did you get the chance to speak with Mr Belloc, the victim care officer?’

Beth shook her head. ‘I slept through the whole thing.’ She dried her nose on the cuff of her sleeve. ‘I’m sorry. Thank God Carmen and Tommy are safe . . . I was so
sick
with worry. We both were. I’ve never seen Terry like that . . .’

‘Angry?’

‘Scared,’ Beth said. ‘He was scared to death, the same as me.’

24

‘Terry was on a mission to make Clancy a better person.’ Marnie held the side of her neck as if it hurt her. ‘Beth says he devoted hours to talking with Clancy about the need to be less irresponsible. Less like Matt, in other words. I think I understand why Clancy ran, maybe even why he took the children to Cole’s house. But why didn’t he stay there? If he’s scared of Terry . . . why didn’t he go into hiding too?’

‘It wasn’t a great hiding place,’ Noah said. ‘That close to number 14, and somewhere Terry had a key to? I’m guessing he panicked.’

‘So where is he now? Why are they both missing? And why take Ed?’

‘I know you think the Brands are a dead end, but could Clancy have gone home? They have a very secure house, with a panic room. If he was trying to hide . . .’

‘Would you go back there? If you’d run away, more than once? If they’d had you fitted with an alarm as their idea of security? I wouldn’t. I’d take my chances in the open air. I think Clancy’s running. What I don’t understand is why Terry’s running too. If he is . . .’

She shook her head. ‘Consider
missing
as an indicator, not
just an event in itself, isn’t that what they tell us? Terry was scared stiff when the children went missing. There’s been no activity on his credit or Oyster cards. No signal on his phone suggests he’s gone underground. Until we get a sighting of the car, our best bet is looking at the hiding places he knew about from Merrick.’ She looked at Colin Pitcher. ‘What’s Cole given us so far?’

‘Merrick has seventeen sites under development in the Greater London area. Fourteen have bunkers or tunnels, or similar. Do you want us to widen the search?’

‘Not yet. How about the security firm that was tagging Clancy? Any crossover between Merrick’s sites and the places where Clancy used to go?’

‘Possibly, but the firm won’t release the data without parental consent, or a warrant.’

Debbie said, ‘Mr and Mrs Brand aren’t answering calls.’

‘They won’t.’ Marnie studied Colin’s list. Adam had told her about the Brands. ‘They’ll lawyer up before we get within fifty feet of our first question, but there’s no reason to think they know where Clancy or Terry went, so I’m not in a hurry to waste time there.’

‘Security nuts,’ Ron said disgustedly. ‘But they let their only kid go missing. What’s the point in making your home into Fort Knox if your son isn’t safe?’

His phone rang and he moved to answer it.

Marnie looked at Colin. ‘How’re you getting on with Mr Cole?’

‘Very well. He’s meticulous, and he really wants to help.’

‘One thing,’ Noah said. ‘We could check the soil types at Merrick’s sites. The last time we saw Terry, he had red hands. From soil, or clay. Beth said he’d been at work, but this was
after
the children were first missing. His boots were stained red too.’

‘Alluvial,’ Colin said. ‘That’s reddish brown.’ He looked
at the list of sites. ‘Most of the subsoil at the Isle of Dogs is alluvial. Perhaps we should start there.’

‘He’s looking for Clancy,’ Debbie said. ‘That’s my bet. He was scared stiff when he heard the kids were missing and
he
wouldn’t have left them at Cole’s place. He’s after Clancy.’

‘He doesn’t know,’ Marnie reminded her, ‘that we’ve found Carmen and Tommy. He’s not answering his phone, and we don’t have any easy way to get that message to him. We have to assume he’s looking for all three children.’

‘Or he’s hiding from us. He saw the photo of Esther. He must’ve known we’d find out he was Matt Reid. The secrets he kept from Beth . . . it’s all come out now.’

‘He wouldn’t run without knowing the children were safe,’ Noah said. ‘Not after what he went through with Esther. He
must
have gone looking for them.’

‘With Ed?’ Marnie kept her voice light. ‘Ed would have told him to keep his phone switched on, for news of the children. Ed trusted us to find them.’

Noah nodded, but he said, ‘We’ve got a man who lost his first family in a way that would drive anyone insane. And an angry teenage boy whose parents are obsessed with everyone’s safety but his. I wouldn’t want to bet which one’s more dangerous.’

Ron came back from his desk, bright-eyed. ‘CCTV sighting.’

‘Terry, or Clancy?’

‘Merrick. At one of the sites Cole told us to look out for, off the M25. Artificial caves. They used to take young offenders down there as part of some bollocksy programme to get them used to controlled spaces. Site’s been closed for donkey’s, but CCTV’s got Merrick heading in there at 1.35 p.m. He didn’t come back out.’

‘Good work. Noah, we’ll take this one.’ She nodded at the others. ‘Keep looking for Terry and Clancy.’

‘What d’you want to do about the press, Fletcher? He keeps demanding a fag break.’

‘He can wait,’ Marnie said. ‘We’re busy.’

 • • • 

‘Detective Inspector.’ Connie was in the doorway to the interview room. ‘My daughter needs a doctor. We’ve been waiting hours.’

In the interview room, Alison was sitting with her hands pressed to the table, silver patches of sweat on her face. Her eyes were fixed on the wall so intently that Noah half expected to see words written there.

‘Why does she need a doctor?’ Marnie asked.

‘Why do you think?’ Connie snapped. ‘She’s not well. Do you imagine it’s been easy for her coming here, talking about what happened? She needs to see someone. She needs pills.’

‘Is she asking for a doctor?’

‘No.’

‘Then—’

‘Don’t give me that,’ Connie said. ‘You know as well as I do that she’s sick.’ She blinked tears from her eyes, looking ferocious. ‘She’ll never ask for help, because she doesn’t think she deserves any. But I’m her mother and I’m telling you she needs a doctor.’

Marnie nodded at Noah. ‘Go. Take DS Carling. Bring Mr Merrick back here so we can ask him some questions.’

She looked to where Connie’s daughter was sitting with her face to the wall.

‘I’d better stay and deal with this.’

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