by C. J. Skuse
Praise for C J Skuse
‘This darkly comic novel…has the potential to become a cult classic’
DAILY MAIL
‘This isn’t a book for the squeamish or the faint-hearted … think Bridget Jones meets American Psycho’
RED
‘Filthy and funny… a compulsive read’
SUNDAY TIMES
‘You MUST read this book especially if you like your (anti) heroes dirty-mouthed, deadly dark, dark dark. I adored it’
FIONA CUMMINS, AUTHOR OF RATTLE
‘This anti-hero is psychotic without doubt… incredibly funny’
SHOTS
‘Brutal, bone-crunching, enthralling and entertaining… as brilliant as it is shocking, and marks a fascinating turning point for a young and vibrant author’
LANCASHIRE POST
‘If you like your thrillers darkly comic and outrageous this ticks all the boxes’
SUN
‘Makes Hannibal Lecter look like Mary Poppins… this is going to give me a serious book hangover’
JOHN MARRS, AUTHOR OF THE ONE
C J SKUSE was born in 1980 in Weston-super-Mare. She has two First Class degrees in Creative Writing and Writing for Young People, and aside from being a novelist works as a Senior Lecturer at Bath Spa University.
Also by C J Skuse:
Sweetpea
In Bloom (Book 2 in the Sweetpea series)
For Young Adults:
Pretty Bad Things
Rockoholic
Dead Romantic
Monster
The Deviants
The Alibi Girl
C J Skuse
ONE PLACE. MANY STORIES
Copyright
An imprint of HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
1 London Bridge Street
London SE1 9GF
First published in Great Britain by HQ in 2020
Copyright © C J Skuse 2020
C J Skuse asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.
Ebook Edition © February 2020 ISBN: 9780008311407
Note to Readers
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Page numbers taken from the following print edition: ISBN 9780008311391
For my excellent friend, Laura Myers
Alibi Clock (n):
a clock which strikes one hour,
while the hands point
to a different time,
the real time being neither one
nor the other.
E. COBHAM BREWER 1810–1897. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. 1898.
Contents
Cover
Praise
About the Author
Booklist
Title Page
Copyright
Note to Readers
Dedication
Present Day
Chapter 1: Ellis
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
24 Hours Later
Chapter 16: Foy
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
December 23rd One Year Later
Chapter 28: Ellis
Author’s Note
Acknowledgements
Extract
About the Publisher
Present Day
Curl Up and Dye,
Spurrington-on-Sea,
North-West England
1
Ellis
Monday, 21st October
I can’t read this Hello! magazine again. There’s only so many times I can admire Brooklyn Beckham’s left armpit. It’s not as though there’s anything else to read either. There’s a Vogue with dried snot on the contents page. And Charlize Theron is on the cover of Cosmo so I can’t even touch that one. I’ve been afraid of her since Snow White. Keep thinking she’ll come out of the page and bite me.
So, in the absence of reading material, I’m squinting at a cockroach scuttling across the floor with a clump of shorn hair on its back like some tiny game show host. My own hair sits lankly around my ears – it can’t wait another day. I’ll give it another five minutes before I go back to the flat and dye it myself over the bath with a kit.
And now the baby’s grizzling. I’ve tried sticking my knuckle in her mouth but she’s hungry. I’m not feeding her here. How can you talk to a perfect stranger quite politely one moment and then flop your boob out the next? How do women do that? And what is the stranger supposed to do? Not look at it? A boob is my third most private part after my feet and my noo-noo. I’d look. Not for long, but I would look.
After fifteen-and-a-half full minutes, a short Roseanne Barr-ish woman scuffs through the beaded curtain. She has Hobbit feet wedged into mint-green flip flops and tattoos up and down both forearms – Tom Hiddlething as Loki all up her right, Chris HemWhatNot as Thor all up her left.
‘Hiya, I’m Steffi. Is it Mary?’ Her eyes don’t smile.
‘Yes. Mary Brokenshire.’
Steffi’s in a washed-out Gryffindor T-shirt and her hair is spare rib coloured, parted and shaved severely up the side.
‘If you’d like to come this way …’
Steffi leads me through the beads, across the glittery black floor tiles and through a grubby woodchip archway, towards the sinks but not quite at them. We swerve over to a side chair with a mirror in front of it and she sits me down and places her hot hands on my shoulders. She gives me an unnecessary chat about what I want done even though she already knows because I came in last week for a patch test and we went through it all then.
‘Right, black it is then. Have you been offered a tea or coffee?’
‘No.’ I don’t like tea or coffee. I’d prefer a juice but they don’t have juice, only some value squash which I only have to look at to feel my teeth rotting at the roots. Even I know asking for a milk would be too childish in this environment so, for appearances sake, I say, ‘I’d love a tea, thanks.’
Steffi disappears and returns with a cape but no tea. She waits for me to take Emily out of the papoose and transfer her to the pushchair, hoping to catch a glimpse. I get it: people love b
abies. I tuck her into the buggy and drape a muslin over the opening. I don’t like people looking at her, or me, for too long. Just in case.
Steffi sweeps the cape around my body, rendering everything but my head invisible. I used to like wearing a cape. Or an oversized bath towel. There’s nothing quite like that feeling of getting out of a hot bath, wrapping the big bath towel around you and pretending to fly up the corridor with the towel flapping along behind. Me and my cousin Foy used to do that all the time after our baths. Or was it only once?
‘How are you coping with the little one?’ Steffi asks.
‘Fine, thanks. She’s our fifth, so we’re used to being tired all the time. You know what it’s like, I’m sure!’
‘Oh yeah,’ she says, face brightening. ‘We’ve got four and it’s chaos. We love it though. Love the chaos!’ We share the laugh only parents can share as she begins pasting on my colour. ‘Have you got anything planned for the rest of the day?’ I get the impression she’s asked this question 11,000 times. There’s no inflection. No real note of interest. I still answer.
‘Not really. A bit of shopping. Pick the kids up. I’m still on maternity leave from my practice so it’s nice not to have such a rigid timetable.’
‘What sort of practice?’
‘I’m a doctor. A GP.’
‘Oh right. Where are they all today then? At a friend’s house?’
I’m momentarily confused. ‘My children? They’re all at school.’
‘They not on half term?’
‘They’re all at private school,’ I say. ‘Their half term was last week.’
‘Oh,’ she says, with more than a hint of lemon juice about it. ‘You’ve got four of them at private school?’
‘Yeah,’ I tell her proudly, rocking the buggy. ‘Apples of their daddy’s eye. We’re stopping at five though. I’m having my tubes tied in January, I’ve told him already. He’d have a football team, given half the chance.’
‘Yeah, I think mine would!’
‘It’s our anniversary today so my mum and dad are going to have the kids tonight so we can go out for a meal.’
‘Ooh, where are you going? Anywhere nice?’
What a stupid question that is. No, we’re off to a complete dive with a one-star hygiene rating and a chef who wipes his bum on the lettuce. ‘The China Garden. The one with the gold dragon hanging from the ceiling? His treat.’
‘What does he do then, your bloke?’
I ignite when she says ‘Your bloke’. It’s lovely to have a bloke who belongs to me. ‘He’s a personal trainer.’
‘Nice. I wish my old man would take me out. Do you know I don’t think we’ve had a night out since our Livvy was born. And she’s starting Reception next month.’
‘Oh really?’
‘Yeah. We can’t afford it anyway. Rich’s been laid off from the airport.’
‘Oh right,’ I say, with the hint of gloom she seems to expect. ‘What did he—’
‘—baggage handler at John Lennon. Twenty years he gave them. Went in on his days off when they were striking and everything. And he caught a terrorist.’
‘Oh gosh.’ Cockroach Game Show Host scuttles back along the skirting board. I pretend to have a coughing fit and Steffi asks if I’d like some water, which is when she’s reminded about the tea she hasn’t made me yet and scurries off to see ‘where it’s got to’ like tea has a mind of its own.
I’m finally brought my tea and two Custard Creams – one with a corner snapped off. I remove the top of one biscuit and scrape out the cream with my bottom teeth. I put the two sides back together and munch it until it makes a neat circle of spitty biscuit between my thumbs, then I put it in my mouth ’til it dissolves. I don’t realise until I swallow that Steffi has been watching me. My cheeks flame as red as my roots.
But then my phone pings in my handbag and I rifle around to find it. ‘Probably Daddy, checking in on his girls.’
‘Ahhh,’ says Steffi, all misty-eyed.
It isn’t Daddy. It’s an email from eBay, letting me know about their half term sale on personalised school stationery.
‘Was it him?’ says Steffi, combing my colour through.
‘Yeah. He’s asking if I want anything brought in. Bless him.’
‘He sounds like a keeper.’ I hold up my iPhone screen to show her his photo. She takes it off me and squints. ‘Blimey, he’s gorgeous.’
I know what she’s thinking – that a woman like me couldn’t have possibly ‘got’ a guy like him. ‘I’m very lucky.’ She returns me the phone and I put him away safely in my bag. ‘We were childhood sweethearts.’
‘You started early then. I thought you looked young to have five kids.’
‘I had the first one at fourteen.’
‘Blimey.’
‘Then the twins, then Harry. Wasn’t easy with the medical degree, but we managed. Then this little surprise came along.’
‘I met my Rich on a hen weekend.’
I hadn’t asked and it’s not interesting to me but I pretend it’s the most interesting thing because for some reason I’m happy in her company. Two married mums together. ‘I love a good knees-up.’
‘Yeah it did get a bit rowdy,’ she laughs. ‘He did karaoke to “Once, Twice, Three Times a Lady” and pointed at me when he was singing. I knew then he was The One.’
I smile at the mirror. ‘The One. It’s a nice feeling, isn’t it?’
‘Oh, don’t get me wrong, we have our moments. He woke up yesterday with a cold, right? And his breathing has become all like that Darth Wossit. And I said to him “Rich, I swear to God, if you breathe like that anymore, I’m gonna ram your head in the bacon slicer.” He was winding me up that much.’
I don’t get that. Why stay with a person whose breathing makes you want to commit actual murder on their head? So I ask her.
‘So you don’t love him anymore?’
‘Oh, course I do,’ she laughs. ‘I were only joking. Just wish he worked on an oil rig or summut, so he’d leave the bloody house once in a while, you know?’
I don’t get that either but, before I can ask, she hands me the same magazine I read six times in the waiting room and I’m treated to another glimpse of hairy Brooklyn and interviews with Liam Payne’s mother and the Britain’s Got Talent failure who’s had twenty facelifts and still hates himself.
We used to play Britain’s Got Talent at the pub. It would be after the kitchen had closed for the evening. Auntie Chelle would be helping Uncle Stu in the bar and the boys would be upstairs and me and Foy would sneak down for midnight feasts of still-warm chips from the fryers and leftover baguette ends dipped in salad cream. We’d take it in turns to come through from the utility room, telling a sob story to the panel of stuffed toys on the breakfast bar then screech ‘Flying Without Wings’ into a vinegar bottle. Miss Whiskers and Thread Bear always put us through to Bootcamp.
After half an hour, Steffi returns. ‘Let’s get you washed. Leave her with Jodie.’
The one called Jodie, with the shoulder tattoo of moons and stars and the white DMs, appears beside the buggy, all smiley and young. ‘Yeah, I’ll watch her for ya.’
‘Don’t let her out of your sight, will you?’ I say.
‘No probs. Can I have a little hold if she wakes up?’
‘No, I’d rather you didn’t. Thanks. She’s better left to her own devices.’
Steffi leads me back across the glittery floor to the sinks. I must get some glitter. I don’t know what for yet but I don’t use nearly enough of it. It’ll be November soon so I could get a head start on decorating for Christmas. Steffi’s pressing buttons and running water before I’ve even sat down. As I do, a bizarre kneading sensation begins in my lower back, rising up my spine and into my shoulder blades.
‘Oh my god!’ I jerk forwards and I realise it’s one of those massage chairs.
‘Is it too hard for you?’ she asks.
‘Um, no, sorry. I just never tried one before.’
&nbs
p; ‘Do you want me to turn it off?’
‘No, it’ll be fine. I think.’
‘It’s supposed to help you relax,’ she says. ‘But some people don’t like the feel of it. Let me know if it gets too much.’
I lie back again and within moments I’m letting out involuntary grunts at the luscious deep kneading all over my back. I’m making noises people usually only make when they do naughties. Luckily, there are too many dryers on for anyone to hear me.
‘I’ve recently started selling Avon on the side actually,’ says Steffi out of nowhere. ‘Would you be interested in a catalogue?’
‘Uh—’
‘And I’m organising a party at my place on Saturday night if you’re free?’
I’ve done nothing to warrant this invitation but I’m imagining she gets the smell of money off me, knowing I have four children at private school. ‘It would be difficult,’ I say, between grunts. ‘Saturdays are our family days normally.’
‘Bring ’em all along. Our kids’ll be there. They can watch Disney in the family room. The blokes usually go down the pub.’
‘My Kaden doesn’t drink. He’s more into his coconut water and plankton shots.’
‘Well he can sit in the other room watching Ant and Dec, can’t he? Go on, it’ll be a laugh. I can’t promise any food but people usually only want Pringles and Prosecco at these things, don’t they? Bring a bottle.’
‘Well I can’t drink at the moment because I’m breastfeeding but it sounds great. I’d love to come. Thank you.’
And while my lips are saying I’d love to, I know I won’t go. I’m breaking into a sweat thinking about it. I’m like Ariel in The Little Mermaid. I’m ginger and I want to be with them – up where they walk and run and play all day in the sun. But I can’t be part of that world. And I absolutely cannot be ginger. That’s just how it is.
But I say no more and after divulging her address, Steffi doesn’t ask me again. She vigorously rubs my head and I’m in ecstasy. By the time we’re on the second shampoo I’m used to the sensations and I just want to feel the pressing of her fingers into my scalp; the rubbing and rinsing and smoothing; the kneading into my back and shoulders. I want to lie in this synthetic coconut paradise forever. I crane my neck through the archway and see Jodie rocking the buggy while scrolling her phone.