Read The Lake House Online

Authors: Helen Phifer

The Lake House (26 page)

‘I need a hand.’

He was greeted by complete silence, so he knocked again much louder.

‘I said I need a hand, so stop being a drama queen and come help me.’

‘Why, Henry?’

‘Because I need to hide the body and I can’t lift it on my own. At the moment it’s lying on our lawn and if anyone was to wander down to the shore they would get a bit of a shock. What’s done is done. I can’t change that now, but we can slow down the car crash that’s waiting to happen if you help me. Please.’

He heard some shuffling around and stepped back as she opened the door. Her cheeks were wet and her eyes were red. He didn’t say anything. She’d been the one to piss him off. She was lucky it wasn’t her body lying outside on the gravel.

‘You’d better put a jumper on. It’s freezing outside.’

She turned and pulled on a pair of leggings and a black jumper. He nodded his approval and then he went outside.

Megan, who for the first time since the day she’d met Henry had actually spent ten minutes contemplating her own mortality, followed. She blanched when she saw the body lying so blatantly obvious on the grass, but waited for him to tell her what to do.

‘Right, when I say, we’re going to carry it through the hedge to the boathouse. I’ll climb inside and open the window as far as I can, then we’ll both have to shove it through the gap.’ She nodded and walked around to the woman’s feet, not wanting to have to stare into the bloodied mess that was at the other end. It was a struggle and before long the sweat was running down Megan’s forehead and into her eyes, but they half shuffled, half dragged the woman towards the boathouse.

When they reached it Henry climbed through, opening the window as wide as it would go. After what seemed like forever, with one final shove they managed to get her inside. He didn’t catch her and there was a loud thud as her body hit the floor. Henry disappeared, leaving her standing there, shivering. A noise from somewhere in the garden made her whip her head around to see what it was, no doubt a fox or a badger, but it sounded loud. She looked around, wondering if it was a deer, but a sharp, clattering sound of claws being scratched along a hard surface made the hairs on the back of her neck stand on end. It sounded creepy. She couldn’t see much because of the complete darkness, but she felt as if she was being watched by something that wasn’t an animal, yet wasn’t quite human either. Something was out there. She whispered ‘Henry’, but there was no reply. Finally he clambered back out of the window, pulling it shut behind him.

‘There’s something out there.’ The minute she said it she thought about the horrible face she had seen peering through her window. What if it was some freaky person who lived in the house that no one knew about?

‘What do you mean, there’s someone out there?’

She lowered her voice. ‘Something is watching us. I heard it.’

‘Someone, something? If it was a someone I think they would have phoned the police by now and we would be about to be taken into custody. It’s probably a fox. They’re sneaky and could probably smell the blood.’

She knew in her heart it wasn’t a fox. It was out there watching them and it gave her the creeps. Henry pulled a cloth from his pocket and began to wipe the blood smears from the glass. She stayed close to him, convinced that it was waiting for its moment to pounce and use those huge, scary, black claws on her. He turned and knocked into her; she was standing so close to him. ‘What are you doing? You gave me a bloody fright.’

‘Can we go back? There’s something there.’

He nodded and led her through the hedge, then she ran ahead into the caravan. He took one last look at the boathouse window. It looked clean enough but he would check it again first thing, as soon as it was light. He didn’t want to leave a huge bloodstain running down the wood underneath it. There had been a large, blue tarpaulin that he’d used to wrap around the body. He went into the caravan and locked the door behind him.

Megan’s clothes were in a pile outside the bathroom and he heard the sound of the shower running. Taking a black plastic bin liner, he scooped them up into it, then he undressed to his boxers and did the same with his own. He would dispose of the bag in the morning when taking her to work.

He had no idea why she had freaked out so much. Maybe she had realised that if he hadn’t killed a complete stranger it could have been her. Or she could be plain jealous that he hadn’t let her be a part of it. Whatever, it would teach her that he was the one who was still in control. She might have helped him to escape but it was Henry Smith who was the infamous serial killer, a bit of a local legend. Henry felt good. In fact he felt better than he had in months because, as much as he liked Megan, this whole thing had always been about him. She had been a means to an end. He didn’t think he would be able to catch Annie or kill Will without her help, but if she wasn’t around he would die trying.

She came out of the tiny bathroom wearing nothing but a towel wrapped around her body and he nodded. Her eyes were redder than before and she looked as if she’d been crying more in the shower. It hit him just how young she was. She looked like a teenager and he wondered if she was regretting throwing her old life away for this one. He had his shower and still couldn’t wipe the grin from his face. He was back in control and in full fighting form, and this time no one was going to stop him.

Chapter Twenty-One

Will called Annie. He had to speak to her. All day his stomach had been in complete knots. He hadn’t been able to settle and they were no closer to finding Smith than they had been this morning. She answered straight away. ‘Well, hello, pretty lady; how are you?’

She laughed and it was the sweetest sound he’d heard for hours. ‘Missing you but apart from that I’m not too bad. My bodyguard has done a pretty good job up to now.’

‘Good, because I’ll kill him myself if he lets that bastard anywhere near you. I can’t concentrate. I’ve been thinking how much I want to come pick you up, get our passports and take you as far away from this place as possible. Should we run away and leave them to it, let them find him and come home when he’s back behind bars?’

‘As tempting as that is I can’t leave. You know as well as I do that he will hurt someone close to me to bring me back, and that means Jake or your parents. He’s clever, Will. He won’t just give up and hand himself in at the nearest police station. You and I both know that he’ll keep on going until he’s got what he wants.’

Will paused. ‘Damn it, Annie, I hate it that you always have to be so practical and that you’re always right.’

‘I’m not always right, but there’s something about Henry that makes me think like him, and I don’t like it. I wouldn’t hurt anyone unless it was in the line of duty and completely necessary, but that man makes me think like a killer. For some bizarre reason I can’t explain I feel as if I have a connection to him. I love you.’

‘I love you more. Is the big guy there?’

‘He’s in with the inspector who sounds about as happy as the rest of us. I’ll tell him to ring you when he comes back.’

She ended the call knowing full well that he wouldn’t be the one to press the red button first. He hated saying goodbye. Will was well aware he had turned into a complete wimp since he’d met Annie, but he didn’t care. She was the only woman who had ever taken his heart completely. His desk phone began to ring so he picked it up to hear a call handler on the other end barking orders on the radio, as well as down the earpiece.

‘Is that Will Ashworth?’

‘Speaking.’

‘There’s a guy on the phone. Says he’s a farmer from Walney, a Gordon Corkill. He thinks he’s seen Megan near the field where the body was found. He’s only just been catching up with the papers. Wants to speak to whoever is in charge.’

‘Brilliant, thank you.’

He waited for the call to be transferred. ‘Hello, Detective Sergeant Ashworth speaking.’

‘Are you the chap in charge of this case?’

‘I am, sir. Can I help you?’

‘I’m thinking more along the lines of if I can help you, son. I’m sorry I haven’t rung before but I work long hours and only have Wednesday afternoons off. It’s then that I sit down with a cold beer and read the week’s papers. Well, I’m pretty sure I recognise that young lass that you’re looking for. She doesn’t have blonde hair, though. When I spoke to her it was dark brown, but she has the same ears as the one in the picture.’

Will tried not to groan as he leant forward and banged his head against the desk. Stu looked across at him wondering if he’d finally flipped.

‘I’m sorry but I don’t understand what you mean. How can you recognise someone by their ears?’

‘They are the one thing that never changes. You can dye your hair, bleach your teeth, straighten your nose, but not many people mess with their ears. I noticed she had a small birthmark above the earring on her left ear. It was like a large brown freckle. Well, that picture in the paper – when you look at it closely – you can just make out a brown smudge in the same place.’

Will jumped up from his chair and turned round to look at the picture of Megan that was taped to the whiteboard behind his desk. He squinted and, yes, he could make out what looked like a large brown freckle on her left ear, just above where her earring was.

‘Sir, you are a genius. Can I come and speak to you right now with one of my officers? It’s a matter of life and death.’

‘Aye, I thought it might be serious. That man she’s shacked up with is bad news. I live in the big, stone farmhouse next to the riding school. You know which one I mean?’

Will didn’t have a clue but he’d find it. ‘I’ll be there in ten minutes. Thank you.’ He put the phone down. ‘Come on, Stu, we have our first eyewitness. A farmer who reckons he spoke to Megan a couple of months ago near to a field.’ He didn’t go into detail about the birthmark. Stu would argue it was a coincidence, but Will didn’t care if it was. Any witness was better than the fuck-all they had at the moment. He grabbed a set of car keys off the board and rushed out of the door, with Stu close behind.

He reached the road to the riding school and was surprised to see the farmhouse. All the years he’d been coming over here, he’d never noticed it. He carried on until he reached the big wooden gates that were propped open. There was a brand-new Land Rover parked in front of the house. Who said farmers were poor? The door opened and a man who looked fitter than him and Stu put together walked towards their car. Will got out and shook the man’s hand. ‘Thank you. I can’t tell you how much this means.’

‘No problem, son. I just wish I’d heard about it sooner. Come inside and I’ll tell you what I know, which isn’t a great deal, but I saw her a few times after that afternoon. Sometimes it was walking but mainly she was driving a small silver van.’

‘Do you know the registration?’ Will prayed to God that he did.

‘No, I didn’t take much notice of it, to be honest, but I can describe the van to you.’ He led them both inside his house and into the warm kitchen that smelt of home-made soup.

‘Wife’s gone to the Bingo, so I make the dinner on a Wednesday.’

Will’s stomach let out a groan. He hadn’t realised just how hungry he was. ‘Was she always on her own?’

‘No, sometimes she had a chap with her. Always had one of those baseball caps on. I never saw him without it and, if it wasn’t hot, sometimes he wore his hood on top of it as well.’

Will wanted to kiss the man in front of him. This was their first solid lead and eyewitness. ‘Where do you think they were coming from?’

‘Oh now that I can tell you – the caravan park a couple of miles up the road. I sometimes take the grandkids swimming up there and I would see the van parked, near the clubhouse. They must have been stopping in one of the static caravans up there. I can’t say as I remember seeing it lately, though, and I was up there just this morning.’

Will nodded. Taking out his phone he began to give orders to the control room inspector, telling him exactly what he needed. He asked for the task force team to be brought in armed to the teeth. They needed to find the caravan and fast. Stu had his head down and was busy taking down as many details as he could. Will couldn’t concentrate so he went outside for some fresh air and to wait for the patrols that would be arriving soon to help with the search.

1 June 1931

Martha wiped her brow with her sleeve. She was concentrating so hard it was making a fine film of perspiration form on her brow. She was in Joe’s room even though she wasn’t supposed to be. It was hard to breathe. The air was so hot and stuffy with the windows closed. Her mother no longer allowed anyone in here but she liked to sneak inside when she could. She would sit on the chair by the window, snuggling down into the soft cushions and trying to make herself invisible. There she would clutch on to Joe’s favourite stuffed rabbit, which only had one eye because they had ripped the other one off in a struggle for it last year.

She didn’t go out into the garden much because she was sure she had seen the thing that took him twice out there, looking up at the house. The first time she had been told off and had come in here to sulk. It had been getting dark outside and there were shadows all around the garden, but she had seen something scurry across the grass by the water’s edge. It had been too big to be a cat or a dog and it hadn’t waddled like a bird would. Instead it had moved fast, like a rat, but it had been too big for one of those and it looked half human the way it was bent over. She had seen the rats that Davey sometimes caught in the traps and they were a thousand times smaller than the thing that had run across the lawn.

She had watched it, her heart racing, the fear making her whole body feel as if an electric current was running though it. Yet she had been fascinated. It had paused for a second, turning to look at the house, and she had let out a small screech and pushed herself down into the chair so that it couldn’t see her. She didn’t want it to know that she knew about it because she didn’t want it to eat her just like it had eaten Joe. She shivered. Poor Joe. He had been a pain but he hadn’t deserved to be stolen by some scary monster. Then the monster disappeared near the hedge and was gone.

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