Those who regularly tune in here will probably regard me
first and foremost as a crime and thriller writer, but they may also be aware
that I’m no stranger to writing horror stories. And usually, at this
festive time of year, I like to post one of these in full, unabridged form right here on this blog. Invariably, in accordance with the
season, I pick one that has a Christmas or wintry atmosphere. This year will be no
exception. However, on this occasion, things are to be slightly different.
It’s long been my ambition to write
something for my main cop character, DS Mark ‘Heck’ Heckenburg, set during
Yuletide. And, earlier this year, an idea suggested itself that I knew I simply
had to go with.
Now, your first reaction may be that cops
and Christmas ghost stories don’t always mix, and you know what, I suspect
you’d be right. But, I’d also remind you that horror fiction does not have to
concern the supernatural to chill us to the marrow. And while in the world of
Heck, I have a strict ‘no supernatural’ rule, our hero still has terrifying
experiences while pursuing the worst of the worst in some of the very darkest
places imaginable.
I won’t say any more about that now. But hopefully,
you’ll be intrigued enough to continue. Because what we have here today is a brand-new Heck novella – BRIGHTLY SHONE THE MOON THAT NIGHT –
which, as you’ll guess from the title, has a Christmas theme, and will
hopefully scare you as much as any of those classic spook stories.
For those who are newcomers to Heck, you
join him here in the early 2000s, when he’s about seven years into the job, and
is currently still a divisional detective constable. Though a northerner by
origin, Heck is displaced from his family and living and working in London,
where he doesn’t yet feel entirely at home.
So, here we go. This is PART ONE.
(PART TWO will appear right here next week, Friday December 15, and PART THREE, the final installment,
on Friday December 22).
Hope you all enjoy, and best wishes for the
season …
BRIGHTLY SHONE THE MOON THAT NIGHT
1
When they’d forecast snow for that evening,
Jen hadn’t expected the real deal. How often did you get proper snow in
central London, especially at Christmas?
On Christmas Eve itself it was a real
rarity, whatever had happened back in Charles Dickens’s day. Jen had once read that
London was a hotter city now than it had been in the nineteenth century.
Apparently, back then, they’d even used to hold a Christmas fair on the River
Thames, with stalls and tents erected on top of the ice. Yet the Thames had
never frozen in her memory, and she was a London girl through and through;
she’d never lived anywhere else in her whole forty years. But apparently that
was because there were lots of underground fixtures these days. Not just the
Tube, but sewers, electric cables, pipes full of gas and hot water, all of
which pumped heat up through the pavements and the road surfaces. And of
course, there were more and higher buildings too, and these were also centrally
heated and full of electricals and hot water cisterns, and apparently the
warmth from these would permeate the whole atmosphere above the city.
So, though inner London could be cold, it
had to be really cold for a traditional snowy scene to develop. Tonight, therefore, it must be really, really cold.
Everyone would think it was wonderful, of
course. All those idiots out there, getting drunk as mops. They’d say it made
everything ‘dead Christmassy’ as they blundered from one pub to the next, the
blokes in short-sleeved shirts with their collars undone, the girls in strappy
dresses with high hems and even higher heels, all of them so blotto that they
wouldn’t realise how frozen they were. By midnight, some of them would be lying
in gutters, or snoring on park benches, and still not feeling it.
You really had to be inebriated to get into
that state, which was another ridiculous thing. How many Christmas Days did
these people spend feeling like Hell, suffering with sledgehammer headaches,
turning nauseous at the first sniff of brandy-cream on the pud?
So self-defeating. So childish.
As Jen cogitated on this, she stood by the
front window under the loops of fancy paper, smoking and watching the snow come
relentlessly down, covering Jubilee Crescent in a pristine white carpet. But,
she told herself, even if she had indulged in a glass of Sheridan’s coffee
liqueur this evening, even if it was still in her left hand, the ice cubes
clinking as she struggled to suppress her annoyance with the rest of the
drinking public, she was not being a hypocrite. She wouldn’t be having much
more than this. Oh, she enjoyed a glass or two, but she knew about the
downsides of heavy drink; she’d gone through too much of it, firstly with her
old fella, and then, later on, with Ronnie.
She had similar contradictory viewpoints
where Christmas itself was concerned.
On one hand, it was a holiday – so that was
a positive. Anything that got her away from the supermarket till for a day or
two. And as a child, she’d loved it. Even though they’d never had a spare
penny, her mum had done what she could with their Stepney Green council flat,
somehow getting their single strand of fairy lights to work each year, using
tin foil shapes on the sideboard Christmas tree, snipping real holly from the
bushes in the park and putting it on the mantel, behind the Christmas cards.
And Jen had received gifts, as well. Nothing hugely expensive, none of the luxury
toys you saw in the front windows of Harrods or Hamleys, but delights all the
same. A pretty dress maybe, or a pair of new shoes; possibly a selection box as
a back-up present, or a Christmas annual. She’d done all right.
And of course, it wasn’t just about the
presents.
Christmas had been … well, Christmas, with
its atmosphere of fun and excitement, its aura of magical mystery. She’d always
enjoyed participating in the Nativity shows at school, or going to church at
midnight, seeing the candle-light flicker on the evergreens and the crib.
But then, there was that other side of the
coin.
As a child, it had never been perfect that
she and her mum had spent so many Christmas Day afternoons up at Pentonville,
visiting her dad. And it fascinated and bamboozled her that things were exactly
the same now, only this time it was Belmarsh, which took longer to get to,
though at least it was in London (for the first two years of his sentence, Ronnie had been in Wakefield, which had been a half-day’s train ride). Of course, wherever
these loved ones were incarcerated, there was no real joy to be had. And that
was despite Jen trying very hard, putting on a face for Ronnie, dressing sexily
for him. That latter was a challenge in itself, as she got older and heavier.
Perhaps it was no surprise that when she
actually sat down and thought about Christmas, it was unavoidably tinged with melancholy.
But there was no point pondering such
things.
She drew the curtains on the tumbling
flakes, crossed the living room of her little terraced house, turned the gas-fire
up till it filled the room with its furnace glow, and then settled in the
armchair, putting her slipper-clad feet on the poof.
Christmas was what it was, and you had to
make the best of it.
Anyway, it wasn’t like she’d be completely
alone. She’d be going to see Ronnie tomorrow. Have a good couple of hours with
him. And in the meantime, she had her other best friend, which was the telly. Its
screen was alive with festive frolics. Ken Dodd was presenting a pantomime from
Blackpool. That bloke was honestly amazing; seventy-odd, and still going
strong. As if that wasn’t enough, Hale and Pace were the broker’s men. Plus, in
case she got peckish, she had a couple of slices of pizza left – the box was on
the floor in front of the fire, while a bowl of popcorn sat on the table to her
right, and a box of chocolates on her left. And if all else failed, and her
defiant bonhomie didn’t last, there was still that bottle of Sheridan’s in the
fridge. Okay, it wouldn’t be the epitome of a happy Christmas, but there were
lots of worse things.
At which point, there came knocking on
Jen’s front door ...
*
‘You sure you really want this?’ Gwen
Straker asked.
Heck looked up from his desk. ‘I’m here,
ma’am. Nobody else.’
She walked to the office window. Heck
continued leafing through the pile of documents in front of him. Heck was only his
nickname, of course. In reality, he was Detective Constable Mark Heckenburg; mid-twenties,
six/one, of a lean but athletic build. He had black hair, usually in a state of
collar-length unruliness, and rugged but likeable features. Though he’d been in
the Metropolitan police for several years now, he’d not yet honed away his
native Lancashire accent, though it was fading slightly.
In contrast, Gwen Straker, whose full title
was Detective Inspector Gwen Straker, was a native Londoner all the way, born
not far from here, in Shoreditch. She was still something of a rarity in the
police, even in the forward-thinking Met, in that she was a black woman who’d
made rank. It hadn’t been easy for her, but she was in her late thirties now,
so she’d got past all the ‘Cleopatra Jones / Foxy Brown’ mickey-taking. Hell,
she’d often thought, she’d have given a lot to look even a little bit like Tamara
Dobson or Pam Grier – but she was where she was on merit, not through any form
of positive discrimination, and was now well respected both for her detective
skills and her man-management style, the latter in particular. In truth, she did
look a little like Pam Grier – she’d even had the long hair at one stage,
though now she kept it short and curled, and she never, ever played the
hardcase honey. Gwen knew about life, but had taken a leaf out of her
church-going Grenadian parents’ book, and prided herself on being affable and
approachable, almost maternal where her own officers were concerned – so long
as they didn’t wind her up too much.
She stood by the window and teased open the
blind, looking more than ready to go home in her jeans, block-heels and long leather
coat, but stopped in her tracks by the whiteout that greeted her.
‘Damn … check out this seasonal weather,
and you stuck in the office!’
‘Think I’d rather be out there, chucking
snowballs?’ Heck asked. ‘Building snowmen?’
She watched him for a second or two,
vaguely disapproving. ‘Mark … you absolutely sure you want to cover tonight?’
He laughed. ‘I don’t think any of the
others would be happy if you called them back in now, saying I’d changed my
mind at the last minute.’
‘I could step in for you. I‘m on-call, anyway. ’
He pulled a face. ‘You’ve got two kids.’
‘They’re not really kids.’
‘Okay, they’re teenagers. They’ll still
want their mum with them on Christmas Eve.’
‘Joking, aren’t you? They’ll be out on the
razzle. Santa’s not that big a draw these days.’
He shrugged. ‘Just leaves you and Dom. Hey,
perhaps this year you can treat him to a different kind of stocking-filler.’
‘Cheeky sod,’ she said. But then seemed to
think about it. ‘Not the worst idea, though.’ She moved to the door. ‘Okay, I’ll
love you and leave you.’
‘G’night, ma’am.’
‘Happy Christmas, Mark.
‘And you.’
‘Try to have a good one, okay?’
He nodded.
‘Nothing you need?’
‘All I’ve got to do is knock this court
file into shape,’ he said. ‘Assuming I don’t get a call-out.’
She pondered that with a grimace. ‘There’ll
be lots of work for Uniform tonight, I’m sure. Especially Traffic. With luck,
nothing so serious will happen that it requires a detective.’
‘Ten out of ten for making it sound like you believe that’ll be the case, ma’am.’
‘Humour me, Mark.’ She opened the door. ‘I
just don’t want something terrible to happen on Christmas Eve.’
‘Whatever it is, ma’am … I doubt it’ll be
terrible.’
*
Before she even reached the front door, Jen
was surprised to hear what sounded like carol singing. She halted, listening in wonder, even though a chill blew into the tiny hallway from where she’d
forgotten to apply the draught-excluder, turning it into an ice-box.
O Little town of Bethlehem
How still we see thee lie …
It was delightful. A deep, harmonious
baritone. Male of course, the product of a single voice. Ordinarily, that latter
fact wouldn’t fill her with enthusiasm, especially on this night of all nights.
But it penetrated the frigid air in a most stirring, emotionally affecting way,
evoking memories long buried …
Above thy deep and dreamless sleep
The silent stars go by …
The distorted view through the fisheye lens
of the peephole didn’t always tell the full story. In all the time Jen had been
living alone – this was her third Christmas without Ronnie – she’d felt most
vulnerable during the long, dark nights of winter. It was never difficult to
picture someone with bad intentions perhaps setting up an innocent-looking
lure, a woman or a child, in front of the peephole, while he crouched just out
of sight, ready to spring as soon as the door was opened. He wouldn’t even need
to do that. Her narrow strip of front garden contained only rubbish, but there’d
be nothing to stop him stepping to one side of the door and concealing himself there.
And in the heavy snow, it could be even more deceptive.
She peered out anyway,
and rather to her surprise, because she could still hear only one voice …
Yet in thy dark streets shineth
The everlasting light …
… there were three of them, and they’d
donned fancy dress. It was difficult to be sure as the snow
was pasting everything solid white, but it looked as if they were in period Victorian
costume. Which was kind of nice – and not at all what Jen had expected.
Was this part of a church choir then? It was
suitably melodious; more than that, really. An amateur dramatics group, perhaps?
Either way, someone raising money for charity.
And that was no bad thing on Christmas Eve.
‘Not be a minute,’ she called through the
door. ‘Keep singing. It sounds really nice.’
She had some loose change on the mantel, a few pound
coins and a fiver left over from when she’d ordered the pizza earlier. On which
subject, it was a damn good job she’d ordered that pizza when she had. It was
highly unlikely they’d be making deliveries now. The roads were all but blocked.
Perfect festive conditions, but a nightmare if you had to drive anywhere.
She bustled back to the door, shoving the
loose change into the pocket of her dressing gown, deciding to give them the
fiver.
That was rather a lot, but it was all in a
good cause.
In truth, Jen didn’t remember when she’d last heard carol singers on the doorstep. It had happened all the time when
she was a child. At least, she’d assumed it would have done, had she not lived
on the fourth floor. She’d been out carol singing, herself, back then. Okay, it
was a form of begging; she and her mates must have looked a right set of
urchins in their scruffy bob-caps and ragged old scarves and mittens, their dirty
cheeks tinged winter-pink under ratty fringes as they offered terrible
renditions of those few carols they knew.
And O Little Town of Bethlehem had probably
been one of them. Mind, the chap outside had now moved on to God Rest You Merry, Gentlemen, and
it was equally enchanting.
To save us all from Satan’s power.
When we were gone astray …
For some reason, just as Jen was about to
open the front door, that word induced a temporary pause.
Satan.
How ridiculous, though. Why should it mean
anything negative in this context?
Erm … maybe because there was someone at her
front door and it was ten o’clock at night, and she didn’t know who they are …
and yet she was still about to open up.
Yeah, but it’s Christmas, she told herself.
And these people are carol singers.
Which, as she’d already acknowledged, were
so rare on the streets these days as to be almost non-existent.
She still intended to open the door, but
now she put the safety chain on first.
O tidings of comfort and joy,
Comfort and joy …
It seemed curious that this was the chorus
and yet only the soloist was singing. Had the cat got the other two’s tongues?
Jen turned the lock and opened up the narrowest of narrow gaps.
It was an enormous surprise to see how
close the soloist was actually standing. He was virtually on the step, his face
no more than ten inches from her own.
‘Ahhh … good evening, my dear,’ he said,
breaking off from his song.
The immediate odour was of halitosis,
followed promptly by stale sweat and nicotine. His garb, though reminiscent of
a hundred adaptations of Scrooge – a double-caped greatcoat and muffler, a
cravat and a high collar, a tilted topper and Faginesque fingerless gloves –
was worn and moth-eaten, a pantomime costume purloined from some forgotten
cellar. His face was pudgy and discoloured, with overgrown side-whiskers, brownish
teeth, and a left eye milky and rolling independently in its narrowed,
unblinking socket.
Even then, she thought, in some vague way,
a wholesomeness might lurk there – that lovely baritone voice! – or might have
lurked there once even if now long departed.
‘And a merry Christmas to you,’ he said, in
a voice rich and resonant.
It bespoke education and breeding rather
than the hardscrabble streets of the East End, which seemed to fit with the
impression she had of a gentleman gone to seed.
She observed the twosome with him.
They stood to his rear, one partly behind
the other. The furthest away loitered in the gap between the gateposts. Despite
the deluge of flakes, which continued to obscure much, this was clearly a
woman. Not especially tall, about five-foot-six – a little shorter than Jen –
but also done up in shabby Victorian garb, and clutching a bundle of rags as
though it was a baby. She wore a coal-scuttle bonnet and a drab, floor-length dress,
much patched, and was huddled into a ragged shawl. The bonnet completely
concealed her face because, all the time Jen watched her, the woman stood with
head drooped, motionless even as the snowflakes gathered on her wool-clad
shoulders.
The second of the visitors, the one
immediately behind the soloist, was much more alarming.
From his size and shape, he was clearly
male, and he wore a parti-coloured red and green suit, like a harlequin
costume, but this too was baggy and threadbare. On his head, there was a red coxcomb
hat, which rose to several peaks, all dangling with bells; underneath that, his
face was concealed behind a protruding papier-mâché mask, a basic, crudely-made
thing whose exaggeratedly moulded and painted features – the axe-blade nose in
particular, and the jutting, knifelike chin – denoted the malign visage of Mr Punch. Though perhaps the most disturbing feature of this particular
character was the eyes. They were nothing but empty holes, and though real eyes
undoubtedly lay behind them, at present they were pits of inscrutable
blackness.
So swiftly had Jen’s enthusiasm for the
troupe evaporated that initially she could barely speak. ‘What … erm, what do
you want?’
‘My dear lady, surely that is obvious?’ the
soloist replied. ‘We are here to spread good will and festive cheer.’
‘Okay, yeah. Well, the song was very nice.
Thank you.’ She scrunched the fiver in her hand, and slid it into her dressing
gown pocket. ‘It was nice, but you’ll have to go now. I’m doing something.’
‘Oh … for shame. On a lovely Christmas Eve
like this. With the weather so fitting.’
Despite the snow mounting on the brim of
his topper, the more she saw of him, the more repellent he appeared – those
yellowish, pock-marked cheeks, those brown-stained incisors, that one
unfocussed eye – and the more certain she was that he wanted both him and his
acolytes away from here.
‘I’m sorry,’ she said. ‘I’m too busy.’
‘All we wish is to entertain you.’
‘You’ve already done that.’
‘You hardly gained the benefit through a
closed front door.’
‘I heard it. You were very nice.’
Jen spoke
in a consciously flat voice, doing everything she could to be unwelcoming without sounding
overtly hostile.’
‘Please, good lady,’ the soloist urged her.
‘Allow us to enter the warmth of your hall. We ourselves,’ … he waggled the
grubby digits protruding from his fingerless gloves, ‘we ourselves are feeling
the effects of these inclement conditions. But if we were to come indoors to
sample your fire, and perhaps a little sherry, a mince pie, who knows … we
might entertain you right royally. We have many Christmas songs in our repertoire.
Not just carols, in case you eschew the religious aspect. If, for example, you
were so inclined …’ mischief twinkled in his one good eye, ‘we have a
range of bawdy adaptations too. Backdoor Santa per chance, Frosty the Pervert, or
maybe Jingle Bell Co …’
‘No, thank you.’ She made to close the
door. ‘I’ve heard enough.’
‘Oh, my dear … I’ve offended you.’ He
extended a hand. ‘Forgive me. It’s merely that we cater for all tastes. But
sincerely, one should not be alone on Christmas Eve …’
‘And what do you mean by that?’ Jen asked sharply. ‘Alone? I’m not alone. I’ve got company. Do you want I should bring
him to the door?’
‘You have company?’ It was a question
rather than a statement, but a subtle one – as though the soloist was
attempting to ascertain information. Jen knew that because she’d been around villains all her life,
and she understood their ways.
‘Yes, I’ve got company,’ she lied forcefully. ‘Like I say, do you want me to call him?’
The soloist licked his lips, his single eye
glinting. Before bowing solemnly, tipping his hat, and turning and lumbering
away around the figure of Punch, who watched her a couple of seconds longer
with those empty sockets of his – achingly long seconds, it seemed – before
also turning. As the threesome trudged up the street in single file, dwindling from
view in the fluttering white anonymity, the soloist recommenced singing:
‘Good King Wenceslas looked out
On the Feast of Stephen
When the snow lay round about …’
On the Feast of Stephen
When the snow lay round about …’
*
Heck stood by the window and stared down.
He had to admit that it all looked dreamily
festive. It had been an unexpectedly cold winter so far, with frost on the
ground for much of December and spears of ice hanging from gutters since long
before the snow had arrived – though, of course, when it had, that was when the
real magic had kicked in. For several days now, house windows and shopfronts already
aglow with tinsel, mistletoe and other wintry emblems had been complemented by relentlessly
falling flakes, while residents had emerged in their droves, in hats, scarves
and gumboots, to shout and chatter and generally enjoy the good old-fashioned
freeze. Now, however, after several days of this, there was notably less enthusiasm.
The conditions had worsened as Christmas Eve drew on, temperatures dropping
steadily, the snow falling in a non-stop cascade, covering roofs, roads,
pavements, yards, filling every ginnel and side-passage, and of course, having
settled on a pre-existing layer of hard-pressed ice, creating traffic chaos as
commuters and last-minute shoppers crammed both into and out of the city,
leading to log-jams of vehicles,
masses of accidents, and tonight – when you added the drunkenness factor – a
police shift from Hell.
In contrast, he wondered what his own
family would be doing.
Not that there were many of them left. His
mum, his sister, Dana, his little niece, Sarah. They’d be together, most
likely. Probably huddled in their small, neat living room, Dana and his mum in
their dressing gowns and slippers, Sarah trying hard to let the telly distract
her from the nerve-numbing excitement, constantly traipsing to the window to
look up at the sky and see if there was any sign of him yet. Or kneeling by the
presents under the tree, checking out their labels for the umpteenth time,
having a furtive squeeze here and there.
There’d be nothing among those parcels from
her piece-of-crap father, that was for sure. But Heck didn’t care. And neither
would Dana. Some prices were worth paying. But he wondered how Sarah would respond when,
in the morning, she came to open the present he himself had sent her.
Happy Christmas, Sarah
Love, Uncle Mark
Superficially, of course, it would just be
another gift, one which she’d divest of its wrapper with further shrieks of
excitement, barely cognisant of the family politics surrounding it. And perhaps
his mother and sister, not wishing to cast a dark cloud on that happiest
morning of the year, would sit back and allow it to happen, only frowning a
little bit. Mind, he wasn’t entirely sure that the Barbie Saddle ‘N Ride Horse
wouldn’t be something Sarah didn’t already have.
That was the problem when you were only
tenuously connected to people. You couldn’t even pick up the phone to ask a
question or two.
But that was the only problem with it, he
reminded himself – as he watched the snowflakes teeming in their billions over
the chimneys and roofs of this foreign city where he’d had no option but to
make his new home. Christmas only came once a year, thank heaven; so it wasn’t
like it made you suffer all the time.
‘Now … you know,’ came an alluringly husky voice, ‘most people are at home right now, or in the pub, thinking that your voluntary decision to work the graveyard shift, tonight of all nights, was an absolute
Godsend. A genuinely heroic, self-sacrificing gesture.’
Heck turned from the window, smiling.
‘But all I could think about,’ the voice
added, ‘was the girl in your life, and how miserable it might mean she’d end up
feeling.’
Despite being wrapped in a lengthy, beige raincoat, Detective
Constable Gemma Piper struck a flirtatious pose in the office doorway.
Heck shrugged. ‘I wouldn’t worry about her.
I don’t think she’s the sort to sit at home and let things get on top of her.’
‘No,’ Gemma agreed, as she entered the
office and unfastened the belt holding the flaps of her coat together. ‘Especially
not when she could be letting things get on top of her here.’
Her normally unmanageable flaxen hair had
been styled into a fetching pageboy bob, which was most uncharacteristic of
her, but underneath the coat she’d gone a whole lot further, wearing only black
ankle-boots and a Santa-themed minidress, red with white fur trim, which left
her arms and shoulders bare, not to mention nearly the entire length of her lithe,
shapely pins.
Heck’s tie already hung in a loose knot. Unconsciously,
he loosened it even more. ‘You’re aware we’re not alone in this building?’
‘Oh dear,’ she said with an air of mock-innocence.
‘You mean we might be putting on a Christmas show for someone?’
He approached his desk. ‘The phone could
ring at any minute.’
She stood with cocked hip. ‘If you couldn’t
multi-task before, this is your chance to learn.’
‘Gotta load of paperwork to get through.’
‘Listen, man of mine …’ Her sweetie-pie
expression – he’d never seen her as cutely made up, orange/brown shadow
enhancing the blue of her eyes, bright cherry-red lipstick accentuating her mouth – gradually straightened
into something more typically fierce and leonine. ‘I’ve dressed as a sexy elf
tonight. You know how rarely I do that sort of thing … so you saying you’d
rather be form-filling is taking a bigger chance even than you’re used to.’
With a sweep of his right arm, Heck cleared
the paperwork from his desk. He glanced round at her with an impish smile. ‘Enough
room?’
She pursed her lips, as if wondering
whether or not he deserved her.
In reality, of course, this was all a game.
Heck knew that, and Gemma knew it too.
It wasn’t long after ten, the night shift
having only recently commenced – and it would be no ordinary night. There might
be a skeleton crew indoors, but there’d be lots of cops on the manor generally,
and so, though the CID office (or DO, as they preferred to call it), was
up on the first floor, someone could still walk in. If they did and they caught
Gemma in her saucy outfit, it would be easy enough to spin the line that she’d
called in en route to a party. But any more than that, and it might be a
disciplinary job, regardless of how much Gwen Straker approved of Heck and
Gemma being an item.
‘Seriously, babe,’ Heck said, ‘why’re you
here?’
‘Seriously?’ She feigned outrage that he should
ask such a question. ‘How could I go off on Christmas Eve and have a good time,
knowing my boyfriend was stuck in here?’
‘I thought you were spending Christmas at
your mum’s.’
She gave that only brief thought. ‘Doesn’t
appeal massively.’
‘She’ll miss you tonight. Doesn’t she
always have a Christmas get-together, and enjoy showing off her hotshot
detective daughter to all her friends?’
‘Funnily enough, that doesn’t appeal much
either.’
‘She’ll have a place set for you at her
Christmas table tomorrow.’
‘I’ve cancelled that place.’
‘Seriously?’ This genuinely shocked him.
Gemma was notoriously a tough cookie. She might be a beauty, but there was
nothing of the girlie-girl about her. And yet, with her mother relatively
recently widowed, she’d been much more attentive on the family front of late.
Gemma merely shrugged.
‘She’ll
be upset,’ he warned her.
‘I’ve had her lay two places instead.’
‘Oh,’ he said.
‘You’re coming for Christmas dinner with me,’
she explained. ‘It’s about time I introduced you. Especially as we’re thinking
of moving in together next year.’
‘Ah. We’re not going to tell her that,
though?’
Gemma looked puzzled ‘Why not?’
‘Well … I’m sure she’ll be a bit more
modern about it than my mum and dad would have been, but I still don’t think
she’ll like it.’
‘No, she won’t like it,’ Gemma agreed. ‘But
she will like you. And that’s going to be the main thing.’
‘Kind of you to say.’
‘May be a bit much to expect her to let us
sleep in the same room tomorrow night, of course …’
‘It would be rude of us to expect her to.’
‘But fortunately …’ She hustled up and pecked
him on the cheek, ‘she’s got a spare bedroom, which is conveniently located at
the other end of the house from her own, but is very, very close to mine … oh!’
Suddenly, she looked concerned. ‘You’ve not done anything really stupid like
volunteer to work tomorrow night as well?’
‘No. Well … I did, but Gwen said no.’
‘Good.’ Gemma nodded. ‘She was listening
then.’
‘You cooked this thing up with Gwen?’
‘Not quite.’ Gemma withdrew to the office
door, and from just outside brought in a red sack with white fur around its
neck. ‘She agreed that you ought to have some kind of Christmas, but she didn’t
know it was starting tonight …’
‘Prezzies?’ he said, as she humped the sack
to her shoulder, and carried it to his desk.
‘In a way.’ The first thing she took from
the sack after she’d laid it down was a small Santa hat, which she placed
neatly and prettily on her bob. ‘Got to get into character first.’
Next, she brought out a kind of miniature all-in-one Christmas tree, no more than a foot tall. It was a fake obviously,
though it looked real, as did the frosting on it. When she unwound the cable,
and plugged it into the one of the power-points in the middle of the desk, blue,
red and purple lights twinkled out from amid its foliage. After this, came a
tin foil package; square in shape, about twenty inches by twenty. When she
unravelled it, it contained a Styrofoam carton, also square, and fastened with
strips of glittery Christmas tape. Before opening this, she laid a cellophane
wrapper on the desk, containing a folded napkin and a plastic knife and fork.
A mouth-watering aroma already emerged from
the carton, before Gemma unfastened the tape and flipped the lid, revealing
four slices of tender white turkey, ladled with gravy, with a generous amount
of stuffing at one end and a dollop of cranberry sauce at the other, plus
sprouts, parsnips, carrots and baked potatoes.
‘If nothing else,’ she said, ‘I thought I’d
spare you a crappy take-out.’
Heck sank onto his swivel-chair. ‘You’ve
done all this for me?’
‘Who else?’ She rummaged in her sack again.
‘And of course, it wouldn’t be Christmas without a little tipple.’
She set a bottle of Bushmills on the desk,
alongside two plastic beakers.
‘Gemma … I’m on duty.’
‘You’re a detective,’ she whispered,
leaning down and giving him a long, moist peck on the lips. ‘There are perks.’
Without another word, she pulled up a chair
and sat down to watch.
Vaguely self-conscious under her
affectionate gaze, Heck opened the cellophane to get at the plastic knife and
fork. It was true; assuming he’d opted to venture out into the snow, he’d only
have gone looking for a pizza or a kebab – if he could find a shop still open
so late on Christmas Eve, and would have had to share its waiting area with all
kinds of inebriated idiots and their vomit. The food itself would be fine, no
doubt, but it wouldn’t be much different from his normal Friday or Saturday
night fare – whereas this delightful alternative didn’t just smell sumptuous, it
was completely different and very unexpected.
‘I can’t believe you’ve done all this,’ he
said.
‘I know.’ She gave a kittenish pout. ‘And
I’ve had my hair done, and my nails …’
He regarded her with fascination, as
always, amazed by his good fortune.
Gemma Piper could be a real spitfire when
the mood was on her. And yet somehow, he and she had hit it off from the moment
they’d met. He might feel some vague regret about the way he’d left things at
home, but meeting Gemma within such a short time of transferring from the
Greater Manchester Police down to London had been one of the best things that
had happened to him in his adult life.
‘You can feast on me with your eyes, if you
wish,’ she said coyly.’ And frankly, I don’t blame you. But you’d probably be
better eating the food. Otherwise, it’ll get cold. And like you say … the phone
could go at any minute.’
He nodded, seeing the wisdom in that. And commenced
eating.
And the phone went.
Gemma couldn’t conceal a smile.
Heck checked and saw that it was his
mobile, which lay on the desk just to his right. He didn’t recognise the
caller’s number, and so hesitated before answering.
‘You really planning on staying here tonight?’
he asked her.
She shrugged, wide-eyed – like the helpless
little girl she totally wasn’t. ‘The snow’s so terrible that I’m trapped here
now.’
‘I mean … under any circumstances?’
‘How can I venture outside wearing so
little?’
He answered the call. ‘DC Heckenburg.’
‘Heck … thank God!’ It was a woman, Cockney.
She was breathless, shrill.
‘Who is this please?’
‘Heck … it’s Jenny Askew.’
‘Oh … Jen.’ He was surprised, and indicated
as much to Gemma by raising his eyebrows. ‘You okay?’
‘No … not in the bloody least.’
‘What’s the problem?’
‘I’ve just had three real weirdoes at my
door.’
He glanced at Gemma again, who mouthed a
curious ‘What?’
He hit the speaker button. ‘Jen … what do
you mean “weirdoes”.’
‘Three carol singers in fancy dress.’
Gemma covered her mouth.
‘Jen, love …’ Heck said, trying not to
sound tickled. ‘It’s Christmas Eve. I’m sure it’s …’
‘No, NO!’ Her assertive voice echoed round the DO. ‘I’m not talking about a bunch of drunks having a
giggle. There was something wrong with this.’
‘Hey, listen,’ Heck said semi-sternly, ‘you know
we have an emergency number for this kind of thing. I mean, there are patrols
out and about who can easily pop round and see you …’
‘No, no!’ Again, there was a desperate edge
to her voice. ‘Don’t do that to me, Heck. You gave me this number at the time
Ronnie went down. You said anything I needed, all I had to do was call you.’
‘Jen, that was three years ago.’
‘Listen, Heck … this isn’t good. I mean I
was scared. Really scared.’
‘Okay ...’ He sat back and indicated to
Gemma that maybe she could cover his food for him. ‘Exactly what was weird
about these guys?’
‘How
about everything. The way they looked, the way they behaved. They wanted me to
let them in, so that they could sing carols for me. How often does that happen?’
‘Well …’
‘And after I fired them off, they went to
my back door and tried to get in that way.’
Heck sat slowly upright. ‘They did?’
Gemma also glanced round, her amused expression
hardening with professional curiosity.
‘Yeah … as God’s my witness.’
‘Are they still hanging around?’ he asked.
‘Well, I can’t see them anymore, but I
can’t see a bloody thing. It’s like the North bleeding Pole out there.’
Heck glanced at his watch. ‘What time was
this?’
‘I don’t know. Twenty-five minutes ago.
Heck … can you come round?’
‘I don’t know, Jen.’ He watched gloomily as
Gemma re-wrapped the carton in foil. ‘I’ve got quite a lot on. And a bunch of
carol singers on Christmas Eve? It’s hardly unusual …’
‘They also know I’m here on my own.’
Further objections faltered on his lips.
Again, Gemma glanced round.
‘How do they know that?’ he asked.
‘You tell me. But the main one, the singer
… he mentioned it, and he didn’t look happy when I told him I had
company. Come on, Heck … what’s so important? You’re only round the corner.’
Again, he looked at Gemma, who shrugged his
implied question back to him: he was the one on duty; it was his call.
‘Okay, Jen,’ he said. ‘I’ll come round. But
if there’s nothing to be done, there’s nothing to be done. Like I say, there
are patrols out all night. And if you get on the blower to 999,
they’ll only be a few minutes away.’
‘I don’t want them. I want you.’
Gemma arched an eyebrow.
Heck rolled his sleeves down and fastened
the cuffs. ‘I’ll be there in ten.’
‘So, who’s Jenny Askew,’ Gemma asked when
he’d cut the call.
He stood and adjusted his tie. ‘Remember Jen
the Girl? Ronnie Askew’s missus?’
‘Ronnie Askew … the armed robber?’
‘Yeah. It was three years ago. When I was
in Tower Hamlets Robbery. We nailed him and his two mates, Leroy Butler and
Keith O’Malley. Sent them down for doing two bookies and a security van. They
got seventeen years each.’
‘Seventeen? Seems steep.’
He walked to the coat-rack, to collect his parka.
‘The swag totalled three-hundred grand, and they wouldn’t return a penny. Never told anyone where they’d stashed it.’ He pulled the coat on, and dragged
some suede gloves from its pockets. ‘Look, babes, I don’t know how long I’ll
be, but …’
‘It’s okay, I’m coming.’ She fished her
locker-key from her drawer, and headed to the door. ‘Give us five and I’ll get
changed.’
‘Be warmer waiting here,’ he said.
‘I’m not waiting here. I’ll end up doing
some work.’
She returned a few minutes later, wearing
ski-pants, a sweater, woollen gloves and a big puffer jacket. Heck rang CAD to
tell them he’d be out and about, and they exited the nick via the personnel
door. Taking one of the CID pool cars, a beaten-up blue Ford Escort, they spent
the first five minutes scraping iron-hard ice from the outside of its windscreen, and the next five, even though the heating was switched on,
watching their own smoky breath freeze into a new layer on the inside. Fully eight minutes passed before sufficient heat had seeped through the interior to
prevent this process continually repeating itself, and ten in total before Heck
reckoned he could see enough to risk driving.
They were still chilled to the marrow, of
course, as they ventured out onto a road network now mostly buried. Heck drove ultra-cautiously,
tyres crunching as they made slow but steady progress.
‘Now you mention it, I do remember Jen the Girl,’ Gemma said. ‘Didn’t you arrest her too?’
Initially, he was too distracted to reply.
The local authority had done their bit to foster the Yuletide atmosphere. Snowmen,
reindeer and luminous cherubs adorned the streetlamps. Fairy lights shaped like
Cinderella coaches dangled overhead. With the added bonus of the snow, it was
as picturesque as any Christmas card.
‘Didn’t you?’ Gemma asked again.
‘What … oh yeah,’ he replied. ‘Yeah, I did
arrest her. At the time, there were all kinds of reasons for thinking Jen was
involved, at least as part of a support crew. But none of them panned out. She
was seriously upset when I took her in. I mean seriously. Not so much because
she’d been locked up herself … more because she just couldn’t believe that
Ronnie had been blagging. I’m certain she wasn’t playacting. Talk about floods
of tears. She’d honestly had no clue what he’d been up to.’
Heck threw his thoughts back three years to
the morning of the arrests: Jenny Askew clinging to him inside Finchley
Road high-security police station, begging him not to leave her alone in the holding-cell,
in a state of such heart-rending distress that he’d been moved to breach all
protocols and let her sit in the Custody Area, much to the Custody Officer’s
chagrin.
‘She was as innocent as her worthless
bloody husband was guilty,’ Heck said. ‘It was a relief to release her without
charge.’
‘And since then … does she ring you up
every time she has a bad experience?’
‘To be honest, this is the first. She’s a
nice girl, Jen. Well … you know, nice-ish. A bit tough, a bit streetwise,
but a pretty decent sort. She wrote to me after the trial, to thank me for
playing it straight with Ronnie.’
‘Wrote to you too, eh?’ Gemma shot him a
sidelong glance. ‘You sure this shaggy dog story about the carol singers isn’t
just because she wants some hunky company on Christmas Eve?’
‘Give over. She’s more than ten years older than me.’
‘And does she look it? Gangster’s moll and
all that.’
‘Oh yeah, she looks it. And she’s not a
moll.’
He drove on, still taking it easy on the treacherous
surfaces, their journey made slightly speedier by the remarkable lack of traffic.
They were only a few streets on, but Heck had already noticed how many other
vehicles looked to have been abandoned by the roadside, their users, presumably
eager to get home, having opted to walk or take the Tube. There weren’t even as
many pedestrians about as he’d expected. Most revellers would likely be
installed in pubs and bars by now, which gave the empty, snowbound streets a
truly spectral aura.
‘And she doesn’t, as a rule,’ he added, ‘cry
wolf.’
*
Jubilee Crescent was much like any
traditional terraced East End street, though it looked a little different under its fluffy white topcoat. The parked cars down either side of it were no more than smoothed-off hummocks of snow, with only their upper wheel-arches
visible, and here and there, a wing-mirror protruding.
When Heck and Gemma finally found a gap,
they wallowed through it and ground to a halt on the pavement. Heck did this
deliberately, given that the gutters were likely to be iced underneath, which
might have meant that leaving this place would be more problematic than arriving.
‘Feels like an American movie,’ he said, as
they traipsed along the pavement to no. 44.
‘Gremlins,’ Gemma said matter-of-factly.
‘Hmm.’ He wasn’t at all comfortable with that
analogy.
When Jenny Askew answered the door, she was
exactly as Gemma had pictured her.
An early-forties bottle-blonde, who
routinely went so heavy on the lippy and mascara that there was plenty in
evidence now, even though she was down to her slippers, pyjamas, and a
dressing-gown. There was no doubt that she’d once been attractive – she’d evidently possessed an hourglass figure back in the day – but times
had been tough since; she looked haggard and had put weight on, which, as
she was only about five-seven, gave her a squat, dumpy outline. She welcomed
them inside, pouring out the whole story as they stamped their feet on the
doormat. There was no doubt that she’d had a genuine scare. She was pale-faced
and glassy-eyed. Much of what she said was only semi-coherent, as she led them through into her small, cluttered, overly warm living room.
‘Whoa … wait a minute,’ Heck said, consciously
interrupting. ‘What’s frightened you so much, Jenny? Three
carol singers? A bit weird, okay … but they’ve gone.’
She shook her head adamantly. ‘I told you
they came around the back too.’
She showed them through her kitchen to the house’s
rear door, which she unbolted and opened, before flicking a switch and
activating an outside light. The yard beyond was deep in snow, but several
rounded dints were visible trailing to the back gate, which stood ajar.
‘You always keep your gate open?’ Gemma
asked.
‘Not normally,’ Jen replied. ‘But
it’s easy enough for someone to open it from the outside. You just reach your arm
over the top and lift the latch.’
Though the gate’s narrow top was entirely
covered in snow, Heck noted one point of it, just above the latch, where only a
narrow band remained. He looked again at the tracks in the yard. This incident
had happened approximately forty minutes ago. In the ongoing snowfall, much of
the evidence had already been covered – but someone had unquestionably been
here.
‘Maybe a neighbour came round?’ Gemma
suggested.
The woman now looked irritated as well as
scared. ‘What do you guys not understand about me saying I heard someone trying
the back door? And that was about ten minutes after I sent them packing at the
front.’
Heck glanced at the window over the sink. It
gave out onto the yard, but its lower pane was frosted glass. She couldn’t have
looked out to see who it was.
‘Thank God it was locked, that’s all I can
say,’ Jen added. ‘I mean, they were banging the handle up and down like
there was no tomorrow. It was a good ten minutes after they’d gone before I
plucked up the courage to open the door and have a look. Those tracks were a
lot clearer then.’
‘You definitely hadn’t seen this fella
before?’ Heck asked her.
‘Never in my life. Wouldn’t have forgotten
him, if I had.’
‘With Ronnie perhaps?’
Her expression froze. ‘You don’t
think it could be to do with …?’
‘I don’t know, Jen. That’s why I’m asking
you.’
‘But that was three years ago!’
‘It’s probably unconnected. Just a thought,
that’s all.’
She shook her head. ‘I’ve never seen this
bloke before. On my life. Apart from anything else, he had this really nice
singing voice.’
Both Heck and Gemma regarded her blankly; even
though they thought they’d seen and heard everything, they both of them
struggled to process that bit of information.
Jen shrugged. ‘I know it sounds daft,
but if I knew some villain who was also a really good singer, I’m sure I’d
remember him. That’s the kind of thing that sticks in your mind, isn’t it.’
‘Okay …’ Heck nodded slowly; that made
sense, if nothing else. ‘Okay … here’s the deal. We’re going to go and
look around for a bit. What time are you hitting the sack?’
‘I don’t know. Not much point me staying up
late, is there? Assuming I can sleep.’
‘Don’t lose sleep over it,’ Gemma advised.
‘Your locks kept them out last time. Makes it even more unlikely they’ll try
and come back.’
The woman turned a scornful look on her, as
if to imply that only a police officer could think so glib a statement
reassuring to a householder living alone. Heck could have responded with equal
scorn, advising Jen that if her husband hadn’t been one of these very same
criminals who people lived in such fear of, she wouldn’t be living alone. But
he opted to keep it friendly.
‘Remember, if you do hear anything, we’re
only a phone-call away,’ he said. ‘But use the emergency number. You’ll get a
faster response.’
‘Why do you want to know what time I’m
going to bed?’ she asked.
‘So, I can update you,’ he said.
‘Assuming I’ve got something to report.’
‘Fat chance, eh?’ Only now did it seem to
occur to her how superficially ridiculous the situation was. ‘Carol singers on Christmas
Eve. Be a piece of cake pulling them in. Anyway, I’ll be up till … I dunno,
midnight at least I suppose. There’s a film on later. A Christmas Carol with Alastair
Sim.’ Her features tightened. ‘“You will be visited by three spirits …” Lord
help us!’
‘Jen, don’t let your imagination run off
with you, okay?’ Heck said. ‘This is most likely nothing. Just keep your doors
and windows locked. Listen out, but don’t get panicky.’
By the time they were back out on the
pavement, the deluge of flakes was easing somewhat, but the sub-zero chill
lingered. A deep winter silence hung over everything.
Heck got on the radio. ‘DC Heckenburg to
Foxtrot Bravo, over?’
‘Go ahead, Heck,’ came the voice of PC
Cassie Raeburn in CAD.
‘Yeah, Cass … I don’t suppose we’ve had any
reports tonight of … this is going to sound odd, troublesome carol singers? No prowlers, no unwanted door-knocking, over?’
There was a brief, pregnant silence. Then: ‘Is
this a wind-up, over?’
‘Negative, Cass. I’m serious. Three
individuals, at least one of them is male. Late forties, IC1, approx six feet
tall, wearing Victorian garb. No details on the other two, except that one of
them might be female. They too are in fancy dress, over.’
‘I say again, Heck … is this a wind-up?
Carol-singers?’
‘I’m guessing the carol singer thing is a
disguise, Cass.’
There was another silence as she conferred
with her fellow operators.
‘That’s negative,’ she finally confirmed. ‘No complaints about any suspicious characters of that nature, over.’
‘Nor,’ cut in Sergeant Ian Lavenham,
currently occupying the command seat at CAD, ‘have we got a lead on where Santa
might be at this moment. Or any of his elves. Though I suppose on a night like
tonight, he can park his sleigh wherever he wants, eh, Heck? And we won’t even
know if it’s legal or not? So we can’t even give him a ticket, over.’
‘Roger, thanks for that, sarge. Over and
out.’ Heck cut the transmission. ‘Smartarsed tosspot.’
‘You know, they have a point,’ Gemma said.
‘You’re actually going looking for carol singers on Christmas Eve?’
‘Won’t be so bad with two of us,’ he
replied.
‘I’m not even on duty.’
‘I know, but you’re here. And you’re all
I’ve got.’
‘Wow … good job I’m easily charmed. Okay,
what’s the plan?’
He pointed to opposite ends of the street.
‘You go that way and I go this way.’
‘How many doors?’
‘Might as well do all of them.’
They trudged off in their separate
directions, warrant-cards in hand, but the outcome was exactly as Heck had
expected. In those few houses where there was anybody present, or which weren’t
swept up in party antics, no one reported having received a visit from any
carol singers, weird-looking or otherwise.
‘So, they just picked one house to sing at
on this whole street?’ Gemma said, when they were back in the car, banging
their gloved hands together as the interior warmed with its customary torturous
slowness. ‘That doesn’t happen, does it?’
‘No,’ Heck said grimly.
‘You know, that tin foil will only keep
your Christmas dinner warm for so long … especially if we’re going next where I
think we’re going.’
He pulled cautiously off the pavement and
back onto the road. ‘Fortunately, my darling, I’m having my real Christmas
dinner tomorrow.’
‘You got any idea how long it took me to
prepare that dish?’
‘The thought was wonderful. But having you
here is more wonderful still.’
‘Aww …’
‘Especially as, on a night like this, any
official backup will be slow to arrive.’
‘Like I say ... you utter charmer.’
*
Aberline House, where a certain Mary Byrne lived, was a low-rise, boxy
structure in a badly run-down neighbourhood.
It was actually one of four similar blocks,
all pretty faceless and drab, and desperately in need of a refurb. The car parks between
them, which ordinarily would be sparkling with glass or adrift with litter, lay
under another crisp blanket of white, so it didn’t look as dark and ominous as
usual. But not even the magic of a proper wintry Christmas extended to
nullifying the effects of boarded-up windows and broken light fittings. By the
looks of it, at least two thirds of the apartments in Aberline House were no
longer occupied. As Heck and Gemma ascended the bare concrete stairwell to the
first floor, there was no sound beyond the echo of their own footfalls. But the
steps were damp, which indicated that someone had been this way in the last few
hours. That wasn’t necessarily a good thing, of course.
‘You think they’re after the loot from the
robberies, don’t you?’ Gemma said.
Even though they were indoors, both she and
Heck’s breath billowed thickly.
‘If they are, they’re barking up the wrong
tree, I reckon,’ he replied. ‘Mary Byrne was Keith O’Malley’s girlfriend at the
time of those blags. Keith was the youngest of the crew. About twenty-two, if
memory serves. Mary was even younger than that. She wasn’t the brightest button
in the box, either. Druggie, alkie. She looked a bit like that famous photo of Myra Hindley …
you know, thin face, hard around the eyes. But instead of shocking blonde, she
always wore this pink rinse. Think she thought it was cute and punky. Never had
the heart to tell her it made her look thirty years older than she was. So, if they didn’t trust Jenny Askew with knowledge about the cash’s whereabouts, they definitely won’t have trusted Mary Byrne. She’d have been pilfering from it in the first week.’
‘Foxtrot Bravo to DC Heckenburg, receiving?’
came Cass Raeburn’s voice.
Heck halted half way up the stairs. ‘Go
ahead, Cass?’
‘Yeah, Inspector Khalid wants to know what
you need a spare uniform for?’
Just before they’d arrived here, Heck had
spoken to CAD and requested that they send a foot patrol to meet him. He’d been
advised at the time that everyone was pretty busy, but the message had been
passed on to the duty officer nevertheless.
‘I have an insecure premises, Cass,’ he
replied, ‘and want a guard to sit on it while I make further enquiries, over.’
‘Roger, Heck. Thanks for that.’
‘That’s a bit naughty, isn’t it?’ Gemma
said, as they started up again ‘Suppose they pull someone off something important.’
‘This is important,’ he replied.
‘We’ve not knocked on Mary Byrne’s door yet.
We don’t know what we’re going to find.’
‘If this plot’s okay, we send whoever we
get back to Jubilee Crescent. I’m sure Jen Askew’ll be glad to have a sentry at her
front door. It won’t be for long.’
‘You seriously think we’re onto something
here?’
He didn’t reply immediately, but when he
did, it was a simple: ‘It’s got to be worth checking.’
In response to that, she had no argument.
Gemma was every inch the detective that
Heck was. Okay, she preferred the analytical approach rather than going
with her instinct, which was his forte. But she’d worked in the same department as him for long enough to know that good instinct wasn’t something to be sniffed at. The
famed JDLR principle stated that if something ‘just didn’t look right’, it
probably wasn’t – and yes, it was always worth checking.
Not that she was sure about diverting
resources from ongoing public order operations. But she still kept any further reservations to herself.
Which turned out to be for the best.
The flats’ main upstairs corridor was a bleak, bare passage scarred end-to-end with graffiti; they were half way along it when they spied the door standing ajar ahead of them. It wasn’t instantly obvious that this was no. 17, the one they were seeking, but it was located at a point where the lighting up here ran out, leaving only darkness beyond it – so it seemed kind of inevitable.
The flats’ main upstairs corridor was a bleak, bare passage scarred end-to-end with graffiti; they were half way along it when they spied the door standing ajar ahead of them. It wasn’t instantly obvious that this was no. 17, the one they were seeking, but it was located at a point where the lighting up here ran out, leaving only darkness beyond it – so it seemed kind of inevitable.
Heck broke into a run, barging straight inside, and only stopping briefly to note that
entry hadn’t been forced – the door and its lock remained intact.
They wanted me to let them in, so that they
could sing carols for me.
All power inside the flat appeared to have been
cut. It was deathly cold and pitch-dark, causing Heck to bang his torch up to
full beam – which revealed that the place had been ransacked.
It
wasn’t much to look at anyway. A suite of bare, grey-toned rooms, with little
in the way of furniture, ornaments on shelves or pictures on walls, the few
there had been, in fact, now on the thinly carpeted floor, in pieces – along with
pulled-out drawers, scattered cutlery and broken crockery. In the living room, some
attempt had been made to commemorate the season. As Heck’s torch-beam slashed
back and forth, he picked out paper-chains hanging in strips, bits of festive greenery
here and there.
And a Christmas tree.
This
was in the part of the room where Heck’s torchlight finally came to rest.
Again, it wasn’t much of one. Tall, dusty and skeletal with age, its fake
boughs made from blue/silver tinsel rather anything resembling real-life
foliage.
A few baubles remained on it, but one extra
decoration had been added recently.
Heck’s spine went rigid; he
felt Gemma’s gloved hand claw at his wrist. Several seconds passed before either
of them, hardened inner city cops though they were, could make a sound.
It was Mary Byrne, that decoration.
She’d been stripped naked, and bound to the
tree upside down with what looked like strands of fairy lights. Her pale, bony
body was streaked crimson from the succession of brutal slashes now zigzagging
it top to bottom: not just the torso, but the arms, the legs ... the face.
That face had been worked on with
particular energy, her assailant inflicting such savage lacerations
that one might have thought a leopard responsible rather than a human being.
Either way, Heck could only identify her from the few strands of bright pink hair
visible through the clots of gluey red.
‘Lord …’ Gemma breathed, before they broke
simultaneously from their shock and dashed forward to check for vital signs.
Instantly, the vibration through the floor
brought the entire gory display down in a crashing heap, poor Mary landing
head-first, with a limp, legs-splayed inelegance that no living woman could ever have matched. As Heck only had a single pair of gloves with him, Gemma had no
choice but to stand back and hold the torch, while he hunkered down and made
the few futile checks that he was authorised to.
At length, he too stood back.
‘I’m no doctor, as you’re aware,’ he said, ashen-faced,
‘but aside from everything else, her jugular’s been severed. She’s gone ... and we need to clear
out of here.’
Gemma nodded tightly, and they backtracked,
following as close as damn it the exact same footpath that had led them in,
ensuring not to touch a single thing in the lounge, though inevitably having to
check the other rooms en route, in case any of the perpetrators were still
here, or additional victims present who had not yet expired. All the way, Heck
jabbered into his radio. With the other rooms cleared, he halted in the hall,
continuing to outline the situation, while Gemma stepped into the corridor,
dragging in lungfuls of fresher air. There was
no discernible change in the temperature out there, and it was only marginally less stale in
reality – though in Gemma’s experience, this kind of thing was psychosomatic. No
place, no matter how much it stank of squalor and urine, no matter how much
graffiti defaced its walls and doors, afforded a less preferable clime to a
murder scene.
Determinedly, she got herself together.
She’d seen killings before, she’d dealt
with rape and child abuse victims. She wasn’t easily upset. But that momentary
shock of suddenly confronting the ultimate horror could weaken anyone in the
legs. Back in the hall, she heard Heck in animated
conversation. He was now on his phone rather than the radio. Then she heard
something else.
What sounded like several pairs of heavy
feet were coming down the corridor towards her.
She spun the way of the stairwell.
There was nobody there. Almost belatedly, she realised her mistake, twirling to
face the wall of shadow in the other direction.
Grunts and pants accompanied that thunder
of feet.
Whoever it was, they were running.
Fast.
Right towards her.
To be continued (December 15) …
***
If you have enjoyed this first part of BRIGHTLY SHONE THE MOON THAT NIGHT, please feel free to check in for the next installment - which you’ll find free-to-read right here. But you might also be interested to know that there have been six Mark ‘Heck’ Heckenburg novels published to date (Avon Books, HarperCollins). They are, in chronological order: STALKERS, SACRIFICE, THE KILLING CLUB, DEAD MAN WALKING, HUNTED and ASHES TO ASHES. In addition to all that, the seventh in the series, KISS OF DEATH, which is due for publication in August next year, is now available to be pre-ordered.
Being an admirer of your writing technique, I'm sure it's something excellently written ; but horror without supernatural is not my cup of tea...alas.
ReplyDeleteLuckily, I've still many of your chilling tales to read. I'll pick one of them for this Christmas !
Happy Holidays.
Andrea
Each to their own, Andrea. Have a good Christmas.
ReplyDeleteI was so looking forward to this and I wasn’t disappointed! Can’t wait for the next instalment......roll on the 15th
ReplyDeleteGemma
Gemma
Many thanks, Gemma. Looking forward to posting it.
DeleteCreepy! Can't wait for next instalment.
ReplyDeleteBlack type on dark blue background is difficult to read.
ReplyDelete