by Luis Samways
“Anything on the phone?” Amy asked, feeling a little lightheaded.
“Yeah, everything.”
Amy turned her head slightly and said, “Everything?”
Lionel nodded at her and said, “Looks like your theory was right.”
“My theory?”
He turned the mobile phone around and stuck it in her face. Her eyes tried to focus on the tiny screen, but as they did, her jaw nearly dropped to the ground. There was a text on the screen. It read:
The bitch got out of the coffin. I’m hurt. Come down to Ashford. Use the tracker on my phone. When you get here, kill Demi Reynolds.
“Doesn’t get much more concrete than that,” Amy said.
“Nope. It’s as clear as day. Looks like Demi returned the message to sender. We’ve got five guys dead in a barn. Another two dead up the road near a coffin that’s missing a corpse. Either the dead are coming back to life and seeking revenge, or she wasn’t dead enough and decided to put them in the ground instead.”
Amy nodded and stared into the eyes of Donny the Hat as he sat there peacefully.
“We now know one thing, though,” Amy said.
“What’s that?”
She paused and smiled. “Our girl’s a fighter.”
Fifty
After a day’s rest:
Nine hours later.
Demi had been resting in a hotel room. It was nothing special. Small and cramped, if not a little dank. But it was her safe haven now. A safe haven that would soon turn into her last port of call in the country. She was planning on leaving the British Isles and heading for Spain. She’d go to Barcelona and spend a few weeks there. Then she’d cross the country and head to the west of Iberia, toward Portugal. She was planning on visiting an acquaintance. He went by the name of El Portista. It was a name that only meant something in Portugal. Loosely translated, it meant that he was a supporter of the local football team, FC Porto. They’d won a few European titles, so it was a fair team to support.
But she wasn’t planning on meeting El Portista for social reasons. As much as Demi enjoyed watching a game of football, she wasn’t able to partake in such a thing. She had bigger things on her mind to worry about. Like making it out of the United Kingdom. Reaching Spain and settling there for a while. Getting her affairs straightened out. Then making her way to Portugal to meet up with her only friend in the world.
It went in that order. Escape. Spain. Portugal.
She didn’t know what else was planned after that. She wasn’t that far into the escape plan, let alone what she thought she’d do after her rendezvous with El Portista.
“I need to go,” she said out loud. She was sitting on the end of her bed. It was nine o’clock in the evening. The last ferry to Spain was an hour away. She was not far from Ramsgate. She could get there in twenty minutes. The hotel she was staying in was one of those Premier Inns that the Vicar of Dibley’s ex-husband advertised on the telly. It was nice and clean, like the advert suggested. The only thing missing was a dark-skinned handsome man, but she knew that was a long shot.
She noticed as she got to her feet that her sense of humor was returning. As much as she didn’t like the idea of being on the run, the thought of her shacking up with Lenny Henry was enough to make her realize that it wasn’t all lost.
Sure, some people had lost their lives in the past three to four days. She couldn’t hold herself to blame. She felt sour about Hamish dying. That would never change. But he went out a hero, and that was comfort enough for Demi. She knew that, in a sense, it would be what he wanted. After all, he had spent many years being on the receiving end of Donny the Hat. And that would make anybody angry. Angry enough to kill. Angry enough to get his own back. And he sure did. He got Donny back. He foiled his plan. He rescued the damsel in distress, and he would have gotten the girl, if only he’d lived long enough.
A tear ran down her cheek. She was sad that she’d never gotten to show Hamish how much he meant to her. She cursed herself for being so shallow at times. She only ever dated good-looking men. Men who turned heads. Men who wore fancy suits and drove nice cars.
Men like Nathan Richards. And that turned out just fine. Because of her shallowness, she had been locked away, beaten, and buried alive, all because of her taste in men. She decided that from that moment forward, she’d be staying away from men.
“I could kiss a girl,” she said to herself, looking into the mirror and seeing a rested and washed face stare back at her. She looked pretty for the first time in two weeks. Sleeping in your filth while locked in a dark room will make you look ten years older.
The thought of staying away from men and becoming a full-fledged lesbian shifted out of her mind. She knew she was only trying to cover up her true feelings, and those feelings were guilt. She felt guilty about the whole thing. Like she was the only one walking away free from this ordeal. She decided right then and there that she wouldn’t think of Donny the Hat anymore, or even Hamish. They were now distant memories. She would create new ones. Ones that involved sunshine and adventure. Nights on the beach. Sardines on the riverside. Peacefulness on the Iberian coast.
She was ready to leave her life of crime behind her. She didn’t want anything to do with it. Now all she wanted was to get out of there. So she reached for her only possessions in the world. A slipcase with her documents in them. She planned to buy a rucksack at some point. She had all her money in her pockets. Ten thousand pounds. It was a good job she was wearing baggy combat trousers. They had plenty of room for wads of cash. They wouldn’t check her at a ferry port anyway. She’d walk through a metal detector. It wouldn’t sound off, so they wouldn’t check her.
“I’ll be fine,” she said, looking at herself in the mirror once again. She sighed and made her way out of the hotel room. She had left all the lights on. She didn’t really care. She wasn’t the one paying for the electric. Her mind was elsewhere. Turning off the lights was the least of her worries.
Demi walked down the stairs and past the reception. It was one of those places where you paid when you checked in. As she walked by, she nodded at the receptionist. The receptionist nodded back. They exchanged smiles, and she walked through the sliding double doors.
She got into the 4x4. It was parked in the nearest parking spot to the entrance of the inn. She fired up the engine, and, without thinking twice, she reversed and sped off.
She had a ferry to catch.
After twenty minutes on the road, she reached the port. Ramsgate was a beautiful place. It looked like a Caribbean port, and the horizon was filled with fishing trawlers and yachts. They hovered around the area like buzzards around a corpse. She watched as the yachts bobbed in the water, and she pulled up to a thirty, to forty-car-long line. As she waited in line for the cars to disappear down the ramp into the ferry, the nighttime stars twinkled above her. She thought about her life in England and how it had panned out. She thought about the many men she had killed for money, and how Donny the Hat had hired her for nearly every kill.
Her fists began to tense up as she thought about all the men she had dispatched. Then a light bulb went off in her head. She realized why she felt the way she did. She finally knew why she wanted Donny the Hat dead. It wasn’t because of what he’d done to her. Locking her up in a dark room. Making her sleep in her own feces. It wasn’t because of what he threatened to do to her. It had nothing to do with the fact that he’d tried to bury her alive.
It was to do with what he made her do for a living. All the people she’d killed. All the lives she’d taken. And for what? Money? A lot of good that did her. She was an empty shell. A person with no soul. And she wanted to get it back. She wanted to experience what it was like to kiss a man for love. To hug a child. To embrace a good friend. To enjoy their company.
She vowed, from then on, that was all she would be doing. She would no longer take another person’s life. Not if she could help it. She wanted to be a peaceful person. To enjoy her life. To enjoy something, - anything.
<
br /> The sound of a car’s horn sounding off from behind her pulled her out of her daze. She noticed that the line of cars in front of her had disappeared, and it was now her turn to drive into the ferry. She slowly approached the ramp and drove in. A man stuck his arm out, and she stopped. He walked up to her and asked her to roll down the window. She did as he asked.
“Hello,” he said, sounding quite chipper. He was a large man in his mid-fifties. He had flushed red cheeks and looked like he’d just eaten dinner, because half of it was flecked on his high-viz jacket.
“Hi,” Demi replied.
“Passport?”
“Sure,” she said, handing it over to him.
He paused for a second, looked at her, and then back at the passport. He then smiled, handing it back to her. She handed him thirty-two pounds fifty for the fare.
“Single?” he asked.
“Yeah, no return,” she said.
He nodded and printed off her receipt. It came out of what looked like a chip and pin card reader. He handed her the ticket and nodded her through. She drove into the darkness and came to a stop before a row of cars. A few people were already out and about, hanging off the railings that surrounded the ship. They were looking at the waves as they crashed against the ship’s stern.
She sat in her car for a long while. She breathed a sigh of relief as she heard the foghorn go off and the ship began to move. She didn’t get out of the car until England was nothing but a minuscule dot in her rearview mirror.
“Free,” she said, opening the door to her car and breathing in the fresh air.
Fifty-One
Both DCI Francis and DI Craig were back at the CCTV centre, looking over more footage. They’d been there for a good two hours now, trawling through the various still shots they had of the vehicles they’d found at the scene of the crime. The thing was, they were missing one of the vehicles. It was a 4x4. The CCTV operator had managed to track the vehicle to the scene but hadn’t had any luck figuring out where it ended up.
“A vehicle just can’t disappear into thin air,” Amy offered as she watched the operator go about his business. It seemed to be a recurring thing — watching the man decipher moving images, that is. She had grown tired of sitting in the same chair she had been sitting in before. Her partner Lionel was standing this time. It seemed as if he, too, had grown weary of sitting. After all, that was all they had been doing for the past couple of days. Sitting and waiting. They were anxious to get it out of the way and get back to chasing. That was what they really wanted to be doing. But being a police officer meant that they did a lot of sitting before they got to chasing. That was the way of the job. Nobody told them that as recruits. Maybe if they had been told, they would have brought foldable chairs that were comfier than the ones they usually parked their rears on.
“You’re right. Cars don’t vanish into thin air. But what comes up, must come down. Just like what goes in, must come out,” the operator said as he searched through the data files on screen.
“What are you saying?” Amy asked him. “That the 4x4 floated into the air?”
“No, I’m just saying that whatever happens, we will find the missing car.”
Lionel walked past Amy, who was sitting on a chair in the middle of the dark room. He walked up to the desk where the operator was sitting and leant beside the man. He watched him work from up close. Amy could tell that the operator didn’t like being observed intently.
“What are you doing?” he asked Lionel, a hint of fear present in his voice.
“I’m just watching you work. Nothing wrong with that, now, is it?”
“I guess not,” he said, turning his attention back to the screen in front of him. He began to type. His fingers moved quickly over the keys. Amy could hear the plastic hitting against his digits. She could hear each key being momentarily buried and then springing back to life. She listened to that sound for a long while. She imagined which keys were being hit, until nothing but silence followed. She opened her eyes and saw Lionel staring at the screen in silence. The operator had stopped what he was doing. He, too, was staring at the screen. She couldn’t see what they were looking at. So she got up and walked over to them. The darkness around the room was slowly disappearing as her eyes locked onto the bright screen. She looked in shock at what she saw.
“Is that who I think it is?” she asked in a low tone from behind the two men. They both turned quickly, as if the sound of her voice had startled them.
“Yeah. That’s Demi Reynolds, your number-one suspect!” Lionel said, a smile creeping across his face.
Amy darted her eyes between Lionel and the still CCTV image on the screen. It looked grainy and pixelated. She focused on what was on the screen. It flickered a few times, and she smiled. It was her suspect. After all this time, she could see her face. Amy was ecstatic. On the inside she was jumping for joy, but she was sure to make it look like she wasn’t fazed by the developments. She didn’t want to come across as too keen. That was the last thing any police officer wants to be. Your colleagues end up seeing you as a liability once you become too keen. So Amy held her breath and smiled once again.
“There she is,” was all she could manage. She felt Lionel’s big hand clasp her back in a half-arsed hug. She looked at him and smiled some more.
“But look what she’s driving,” the CCTV operator said.
Amy’s eyes widened. “It’s that damn 4X4!” she said.
“Exactly. I’ve just run a search on the plates, and they match the plates from the 4x4 that entered Ashford. So we’ve finally found our missing vehicle. And now we know who’s responsible for the body count at the farm.”
Amy’s smile disappeared. She had just realized the same thing. Demi Reynolds was no longer a kidnapped damsel in distress. She was a wanted woman. A cold-blooded killer. She didn’t quite know how she felt about that. Since the case had begun, she’d felt some sort of connection to Demi, albeit a very minute one. She saw similarities between her and Demi. Every now and then a case comes along in a detective’s career where they ask themselves “would I do the same thing?”
Amy had asked herself that question. And the deeper they went into this rabbit hole of a case, the further from knowing the answer she got.
“So, that’s our killer?” Amy asked out loud.
“Looks that way. But first we’d need evidence. But I have an idea,” the operator said, reaching for his phone.
“What are you doing?” Amy asked.
“I’m phoning Land Rover,” the operator said.
“Now’s not the time to order a car,” Lionel quipped, to little laughter. In fact, everyone went silent. He decided he’d leave the jokes for another time.
“I’m phoning Land Rover to see if this particular car has onboard tracking. Some models have it, you see. Just in case it gets reported stolen, they can track the vehicle.”
“But what if it isn’t stolen?” Amy asked. “We did a search on the plates, and everything seems to be kosher.”
“Yeah, but who said that Land Rover would only use that tracking device when a car is stolen?”
“You just did!” Amy said.
The operator smiled and said, “Trust me. I’m sure I can get them to reveal certain information…unless they want their vehicle to become infamous with this multiple murder case.”
“That’s pushing it. You reckon they’ll fall for such a thing?” Lionel asked.
“There’s only one way to find out,” the operator said, dialling the number and placing the phone to his ear.
One long phone call later…
“They said yes.”
Amy looked at the operator and asked a question with her eyes.
“Yes?” she said, not entirely sure what that meant exactly.
“Yes. They said yes,” the operator repeated.
“Yes to what exactly?” Lionel asked. He was sitting on the corner of the desk the operator worked from.
“They gave us three pinpoints as to where the v
ehicle has been and where it is now.”
Amy’s face lit up. She was trying not to seem too keen, but this was an entirely different set of circumstances. They had a possible hit on their suspect, and that could only mean good news. But, judging by the sour look on the operator’s face, it wasn’t all good news.
“What? What’s with the face?”
“Do you want the good news or the really, really, really, really bad news?” he asked.
That was when Amy’s face dropped and her keenness dissipated into what could be construed as trapped wind by the expression she wore on her face.
“I’ve never heard somebody use the word ‘really’ four times,” Amy said. “It must be bad news.”
“Well, it depends on how you look at it. Firstly though, we have two pieces of good news. One; we know of two locations where the 4x4 has traveled in the past day.”
“That’s great,” Lionel said, trying to reassure Amy with a smile. But she was far from able to muster as much as a slight twitch, let alone a full-blown smile.
“One of them is a clearing in a forest near Ramsgate. The vehicle was parked there for eight minutes. And then it did a U-turn and traveled to a hotel, where it was parked for eight hours. It then left and made its way to Ramsgate Ferry Port. It was there for a grand total of ten minutes before it boarded what we assume to be a ferry, unless it was able to drive into the sea and turn into some sort of submarine.”
“So the bad news is?” Amy asked, looking at the operator.
“The bad news is, the 4x4 is currently three-quarters of the way to Spain. It will hit Santander within the hour. And then she’s gone.”
“But what about the tracker? We can still use it to pinpoint her location, and the local police could sweep in and save the day.”
“The Spanish police don’t tend to do too many favors for us. Especially since most of our fugitives jump to the Costa Del Sol. Let’s just say, they don’t hold us in the highest of regard. Even if we managed to ring them and tell them that they have a murderous witch of a woman about to enter their land, they’d probably tell us to fuck ourselves,” the operator said.