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KILL ME.
AGAIN.
Rachel Abbott.
Prologue.
It was raining when they came for me. I was staring out of my window watching fat raindrops flow down the gla.s.s, streaking across the reflection of my pale face. I was regretting the impetuous decisions I had made even though at the time they had seemed right and wondering what was going to happen next in my life.
When the knock came at the door, I didn't even check who it was. I thought I knew. I thought I had been forgiven. I hurried to the door, pulling it wide, smiling to show my visitor how pleased I was to see him.
I knew instantly it wasn't the person I had been expecting. I felt a surge of fear travel through my body as I tried to close the door, but it was too late. A second face appeared around the door a face that matched the first in every detail. Two sets of identical features, their shiny cheeks almost cherubic as they reflected back the light from my hall.
I looked at the matching Chinese masks, and my legs nearly gave way beneath me. The plastic a smooth yellowish flesh tone, the eye sockets diamond-shaped, empty, revealing the glare of human pupils beneath.
I didn't have time to scream. A gloved hand shot out and grabbed me round the throat, squeezing tighter and tighter until I was sure I would pa.s.s out. Why were they here? What could they want with me?
They spoke quietly, without the rough accent of local thugs that I was expecting. Somehow that made it worse. They were here for a purpose, and I had no idea what that was. They didn't speak to me; they spoke to each other, as if I wasn't even there. The urgency in their tone was at odds with the smiling faces of the masks, and every inch of my skin rose in p.r.i.c.kles of terror.
I could see the first man's teeth between the red lips of the mask. They were pressed together, the pale shape of his mouth wide and straight, as if the effort of choking me one-handed was too much for him. The two sets of lips a human flesh pair within a solid plastic pair made my blood freeze, but still I couldn't take my eyes from the mask and the glimpse of the person I could see beneath.
The second man grabbed my arms and fixed them tightly behind me with something hard and cold that bit into my skin. And then came the gag - between my teeth, tearing into the corners of my mouth, the rough material chafing my flesh.
The two men spoke again, but their words blurred in my head and became little more than a buzzing sound.
I watched as the first man went into the hall. He was leaving us, pulling off his mask as he reached the front door. He didn't know I'd seen him, reflected in the hall mirror. I realised that seeing his face, knowing I would recognise him again anywhere, could be the end for me. I looked down quickly, hoping neither man had caught my eyes, watching, recording the chiselled features and the slightly hooked nose, knowing my fear had imprinted every detail into my memory. It was a face I would never forget.
The second man turned to look at me, his mask firmly in place.
'And now we wait,' he said.
1.
Wednesday.
The foyer of the eight-storey office block was flooded with bright light, which only served to emphasise the impenetrable blackness of the car park beyond. The receptionist had left for the night and Maggie Taylor waited inside the gla.s.s doors, peering out into the night. She glanced over her shoulder, watching in vain to see if the red light above the lift would change and begin to count down. Maybe the doors would slide open to reveal another late worker, someone who would be happy to walk with Maggie through the deserted car park a vast empty stretch of dark tarmac leading into the distance, her lone car sitting waiting for her somewhere out of sight.
The weather warnings had provided the perfect excuse for people to leave early, though, and she was sure n.o.body would be coming to her rescue. She could kick herself for staying so late, knowing there was nothing that made her more anxious than a large empty building that seemed to echo with silence.
A sound behind her sent tiny spikes of fear up Maggie's arms, and before she could turn she felt a hand low on her back. She spun round and let out a huge breath.
'Jesus, Frank, don't creep up on people like that. You scared the life out of me.'
The slight form of Frank Denman stood half a metre behind her, a guilty smile on his thin face.
'Sorry Maggie,' he said, looking down at his feet. 'It's these brothel creepers. I bought them for comfort, and of course they do make me look a couple of inches taller, but they barely make a sound on a solid floor.'
She couldn't help but smile back at him. He had saved her skin once today and it wasn't his fault she was as jumpy as h.e.l.l. He was a quiet, easy man who never seemed at all fazed by the terrible people he sometimes had to come into contact with.
'Why are you standing here?' he asked. 'Dreading the thought of the cold night air? I would have thought you would have been keen to get back to that man of yours you're always going on about.'
'Oh G.o.d, do I really talk about him that much?' she said, pulling a face. 'Sorry. How boring of me.'
Frank was one of the few people Maggie had got to know reasonably well since she had moved to Manchester seven weeks ago. As a defence lawyer, she had needed a psychologist on more than one occasion to help her understand the likely success of a plea of mental incompetence for one or other of her clients, and she and Frank had shared a few sandwich lunches. He was a great listener no doubt an a.s.set for a psychologist.
'Let's make a move, shall we. Or has our charming client today given you the heebie-jeebies?'
She didn't want to admit even to Frank how their mutual client had unnerved her. It was her job to deal with people like him, for goodness sake. She just wasn't used to criminals who stooped as low as this one had.
'Come on,' Frank said. 'I'll walk you to your car.'
He leaned forward and pulled the door open, and they stepped out into the silent car park.
'"Out of the night that covers me, Black as the pit from pole to pole..."' he said quietly as they inhaled the frigid air.
Maggie glanced at him as the door swung to behind them. She heard a soft click then a clunk as the locks dropped into place.
'Sorry,' Frank said with an embarra.s.sed smile. 'Just a line from a poem that sprang to mind.'
'A cheery little number, if you don't mind me saying so,' Maggie said, nudging him gently with her elbow. 'Anyway, I'm off now. You don't need to walk me to my car, really you don't. I'm being a bit pathetic. But it's good to know you've got my back.'
Frank gave her a small bow. 'That I have, my dear.'
Maggie laughed. She loved his occasional formality. 'See you soon, no doubt,' she added and with a small wave set off in the general direction of where she thought her car might be.
She turned up the collar of her coat, but once away from the shelter of the building it offered little protection from the sleet-like rain that a.s.saulted the skin of her cheeks with hundreds of tiny, icy arrows. Turning her head to left and to right and with a quick glance over her shoulder to check there was n.o.body else about, she hurried towards her car, following the same path she had taken a dozen times without a moment's concern. Tonight was different. Tonight she sensed the threat of the shadows, which seemed to circle her, growing ever closer. Even with Frank within shouting distance, she felt uncomfortable.
Her new Audi was parked about as far away as it could be from the bright lights of the office building, and as her eyes sought out its dark shape she remembered how she had smiled when told that the colour of her much-loved car was Phantom Black. Now it seemed more like an omen as it merged seamlessly into the moonless night.
Maggie pressed the remote, and the double yellow flashes of her indicator lights gave brief warmth to the monochrome scene. With relief she grabbed the door handle and pulled on it sharply. She jumped into the car, pressed down the central locking switch and leaned back hard against the headrest, breathing again, only to jolt forward and spin round, nervously scanning the rear seat.
'Jesus,' she muttered, turning back and thrusting the key into the ignition. Glancing in her rear-view mirror she could just make out the silhouette of Frank, still standing where she had left him. Bless him, she thought.
She knew her fears were irrational. But today she had met the devil himself and he had warned her warned her of something but she had no idea what. She was an experienced defence lawyer, but the firm she had worked for in Suffolk, where they had lived until recently, dealt with the tamer end of the criminal spectrum and the villains had seemed so normal. She had longed to work on more complex cases, but with the exception of one or two infamous cases for which n.o.body had as yet been charged, serious crimes there were few and far between. This man today, though Alf Horton was the worst she had ever met.
'I'm so pleased to meet you, Maggie,' he had said, holding out his hand to shake hers. She had looked at the dry skin on his face and had known exactly how his hand was going to feel.
As she briefly touched his paper-like flesh in the obligatory handshake, thinking of the dead cells that would have been transferred to her own clammy fingers, Horton continued to speak.
'I've heard all about you, and I'm so looking forward to getting to know you better.'
What could he know about her? She had fought to keep all expression from her face as she went through the process of asking the standard questions to begin to formulate his defence. Ten minutes into the interview, she was relieved to receive a call from the custody sergeant to say that Frank had arrived to begin his psychological a.s.sessment. He would be watching and listening from the adjoining room. As Maggie replaced the receiver, Alf leaned across the table towards her, discoloured teeth showing between dried, split lips, and she felt herself backing away as far as she could, so not even his breath could touch her.
'Watch yourself out there, Maggie. Nowhere's safe.'
Some days she wished with all her heart that she was a prosecutor and not a defence solicitor, because this man this s.a.d.i.s.tic monster who had hurt so many people had finally been caught red-handed, and was as guilty as sin. She wanted to see him locked up, preferably for life. That was not the way she was supposed to think, though.
Manoeuvring out of the car park and onto the busy wet streets of central Manchester, she kept seeing the eyes of her client, as flat and dark as twin disused railway tunnels, daring her to explore their chilling depths. She had calmly gone through the details of the numerous violent a.s.saults he was charged with committing, every one against a frail, elderly lady, and she had seen his tongue whip out of his smiling mouth to wet his lips. He was reliving the torture and abuse, and his eyes momentarily glazed over before returning to their flat stare. Maggie had felt an almost unstoppable urge to jump out of her chair, pick it up and smash it over his head.
Perhaps she should have refused to take the case, but she had been so lucky to get this job with a top firm of solicitors. They were offering her the chance to become a partner, so against her better judgement she had smiled and agreed to represent Horton. She had had her share of clients who sickened her with lack of remorse for their crimes, but there was something about this man that made her flesh crawl.
And what had he meant when he said, 'Nowhere's safe'? The memory of his expression as he spoke those words was fixed in her mind, and as she drove through the city centre each pa.s.sing pair of headlights appeared to project a holographic image of his face floating just beyond her windscreen.
Maggie pulled quickly off the road and into a bus bay, leaning forward to rest her head on the steering wheel.
'Get a b.l.o.o.d.y grip,' she said to herself. She reached up and pulled her long dark hair free from the doughnut holding it in place at the back of her head. Opening her bag, she threw the grips and bands in, hoping that the switch in appearance from criminal lawyer to wife and mother would restore some rational thought. She twisted the rear-view mirror and groped around in the bottom of her bag to find a lipstick.
Better, she thought as she looked at her full red lips.
There was a bang on her rear window. Maggie spun round, suddenly anxious about whether she had locked the doors. There was a laugh. A group of teenage boys stood on the pavement, preening themselves, pretending to put lipstick on and shake their hair, one making obscene gestures with his right hand. They weren't even worth a look of disgust.
Maggie wrenched the mirror back into place and pulled back out into the road, focusing on nothing more than what Duncan might have cooked for their dinner that night.
2.
The roads were terrible. The sleet had quickly turned to snow, and as usual Manchester was ill-prepared. Maggie had seen a couple of cars slide into the kerb already, so knew she had to take it slowly, much as she was anxious to be home. Desperate for some normality in her day she spoke to the car's Bluetooth connector.
'Call home.'
She waited. n.o.body picked up. Funny that. The children should have had their tea by now and be getting ready for bed. At least Lily should. Maybe it had snowed a lot more at home, and it would be just like Duncan to wrap them up warmly and go outside for a s...o...b..ll fight. She decided to leave it five minutes and then try again.
In the nearly two months since they had moved to Manchester the children had settled into their new school, but Maggie was concerned about Duncan. As a couple they had decided long ago that Maggie should be the princ.i.p.al earner and Duncan the main carer for the children. It made sense. Duncan accepted that Maggie could bring in much more than he could earn as a plumber, and so now he only took jobs that he could finish in time to do the school run. Both he and the children had seemed to be thriving under this arrangement, and Maggie had to admit that it was wonderful to come home to a meal cooked for her. She made a point of taking over the cooking at the weekend to give Duncan a rest, and it worked.
Duncan had been surprisingly unenthusiastic about their move to Manchester, though. In her view there had been nothing much keeping them down south except perhaps the weather, which without a doubt was better than the cold and wet of Manchester and Duncan had seemed to finally recognise the sense of it. Maggie's huge pay rise had probably helped, but still Duncan had seemed resigned rather than excited about the move and maybe it was time they had another chat about it. She wanted them to be as happy here as they had always been and for the last couple of weeks Duncan had definitely been quiet.
It was time to try calling them again. She waited and listened and was about to end the call again when the phone was answered. Thank G.o.d.
'h.e.l.lo. Josh Taylor speaking.' Josh sounded as timid as he always did on the phone. Lily aged five had far more confidence than her older brother.
'Hey, Joshy. I thought you'd all be outside having a s...o...b..ll fight or something.'
'No.' That was her son. Monosyllabic.
'I'm going to be a bit late, I'm afraid. The roads are awful because of the weather. Can you put Daddy on the phone, sweetheart?'
'He's gone out.'
'What's he doing? Clearing the drive?'
'No. He's gone out.'
Maggie took a deep breath. Sometimes her son's lack of words could be frustrating.
'Okay, love. Where is he exactly?'
'I don't know. He started to make the tea, but then he went out. In his van.'
Maggie screwed up her face in puzzlement.
'So who's there with you and Lily?' Josh didn't answer immediately. 'Josh?'
'n.o.body. There's just me and Lily.'
A jolt of shock fired through Maggie's body. What did Josh mean?
Her limbs suddenly felt leaden, as if everything she was doing was in slow motion. 'Daddy has gone out in his van? Are you sure, Josh?'
She heard a sigh from the other end of the phone and then as if a dam had burst, her son started to speak. 'Yes, Mum. I told you. He was making our tea, and then he stopped. Me and Lily are starving. He's been gone ages. He came into the sitting room to say goodbye.'
'And what did he say?' There was a loud blare of a car horn and Maggie realised that the traffic lights had changed to green.
'He said he was sorry.'
Maggie's head was spinning. She needed to get home. Her kids were in the house alone an eight-year-old and a five-year-old in a dark old vicarage at the end of an unmade cul-de-sac. She didn't know the neighbours didn't know their numbers hadn't bothered to invite people round yet. She had been so keen to get them all settled.
'Josh, listen to me, sweetheart. Take the phone and go into the kitchen.' She listened to her son's faint footsteps. 'Okay. Now pull a chair over to the door and stand on it. I want you to fasten the bolt at the top of the door. Do you know what I mean, baby?'
Logically, she knew there was nothing to panic about. She would be home in less than half an hour, and Josh was nothing if not sensible. But after today's meeting and Alf Horton's warning, all she could see was the black outline of her house against the night sky and a stranger approaching the door.
Striving to keep the tension from her voice, she spoke to Josh again.
'How are you doing?'
She heard some grunts as he struggled with the door.
'Okay. Done it.'
'Right, Joshy, I need you to go to the front door and do a double turn on the lock there. Do you know what I mean?'
'Course I do. Then you won't be able to get in, Mum.'