Risk of Harm

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Risk of Harm Page 21

by Jane Renshaw


  He nodded. ‘Evidence would be good.’

  ‘And we need to be writing everything down, like the police said.’

  ‘Yep, and also... Flora, if we’re ever going to end up appearing as witnesses against the Johnsons in court... We need to be... um... well, credible. We need to hold it together.’

  ‘No more kicking random people in the balls.’

  ‘That would help.’ He was drumming his fingertips on the steering wheel. ‘And we’ll also need other, independent witnesses against them. I’ve been Googling their criminal trials and found out their address. Thirty-four Meadowlands Crescent. I was thinking we might go round there and talk to them, but –’

  ‘Whoa! What would be the point in that?’

  ‘But, I was saying... But, okay, if we’re going down this road, what I’m thinking is we could go round there and speak to the neighbours. See what dirt we can dig up, if any.’

  She ignored that if any. ‘Yes! I thought of doing that too! And I was going to ask Saskia if they’ve got a history of using this garage for alibis… And we need to know which of the neighbours to approach – which ones we can trust.’

  ‘Saskia would know that too,’ Neil nodded. ‘We could go and see her again – talk to her.’

  One thing about Neil – he was a scientist through and through. It was all about the evidence. And no matter what theories he might hold, he was always open to changing his mind if the evidence led elsewhere. He knew Saskia was rabidly anti-Johnson, obviously, but he was prepared to listen to her. He was prepared to be open-minded.

  ‘I’ve been trying to get through to her.’ Flora found her phone in her bag and tried again. ‘Still not picking up.’ She frowned out of the window, at the sun dappling a bank of bright yellow and red tulips in the front garden opposite. ‘But Neil. I don’t think there’s anything we can do to beat them. They’re criminals. They’re psychopaths. I think we’re going to have to disappear again.’

  ‘No,’ he said at once. ‘We can’t keep running away from this. We can’t spend our lives wondering when they’re going to find us again. Beckie can’t spend her life that way. Especially if... Let’s face it, Flora, we don’t know that they’re a danger to us. Maybe we’d be running from something that doesn’t even exist.’

  ‘Oh, so you’re just humouring me here? You’re thinking that all this evidence gathering is going to come up with a big fat zero and then I’m going to have to concede that the Johnsons are no threat? I’m going to have to let them see Beckie? That’s not happening, Alec. Not while I have breath in my body.’

  ‘Hey, I’m not the enemy here, Ruth. If it looks like the Johnsons are a threat, don’t worry, I’m prepared to do whatever it takes. And I mean whatever it takes to stop them getting to Beckie.’

  She looked at him, this man who was her husband, as if seeing him properly for the first time. The typical beta male. The typical nerd. A ten stone botanist who couldn’t swat a fly without tripping over his own feet and knocking his front crown off on the edge of the coffee table.

  But ‘Good,’ was all she said.

  And as he took her hand, sitting there in their bubble as the lunchtime hubbub of everyone else’s nice normal lives swept past them, she made the same promise to Beckie.

  Whatever it takes.

  ‘Oh, hi Ruth!’ Neil’s sister Pippa’s voice across nine thousand miles sounded unbearably cheerful. In the background there were other happy voices – she was probably in a bar somewhere. ‘I was just thinking about you! How’re you all doing?’

  Where to start?

  ‘Not great.’ Flora was standing in the garden in the rain, the landline handset pressed to her ear, watching a man in an orange jacket up a ladder, positioning one of the tiny hidden CCTV cameras under the eaves. The glass doors had been replaced that morning and the glaziers had swept up the broken fragments of glass. She could see a few tiny mosaic-sized pieces, though, along the edges of the paving. She pushed at them with the toe of her shoe.

  ‘The Johnsons have found us.’

  ‘Oh – fuck!’

  ‘Yep. They’ve been harassing us, and I’m terrified they’re going to do something… Try to take Beckie.’ She told Pippa everything that had happened.

  ‘Fuck, Ruth! Fuck! Surely the police can do something?’

  ‘The problem is, the Johnsons are wise to all the dodges. They’ve set up alibis for the times the incidents happened – quite honestly, the police don’t seem to have a clue. We’re getting CCTV put up around the house, but… It’s just not safe to stay here now. I’m going to try to persuade Alec to leave, to go abroad, but he’s saying we should stand and fight. Which is ridiculous, obviously – I mean, they’re a family of hardened criminals, murderers…’

  ‘But there are much stricter laws now, aren’t there, about harassment? The police will have to do something once you have evidence. CCTV is a great idea. Once you get them on that…’

  ‘They’ll probably just get given another caution. And there are so many of them – even if one of them did get convicted and locked up, that would still leave a dozen more…’

  ‘But Ruth… Say, worst case scenario, they did take Beckie… they’d have to give her back. There’s no way they’re coming out of this the winners. If they keep harassing you, they’re going to get into trouble and the police will have to stop them somehow – tag them and stuff like that to stop them coming anywhere near you. They can put electronic detectors on people’s houses now so that if the tagged person comes anywhere near it an alarm goes off…’

  Fleetingly, it occurred to Flora to wonder how Pippa knew all this. Some of the men she’d hooked up with in the past had seemed a bit dodgy, to put it mildly. And she suspected that Pippa herself might have had a few brushes with the law.

  ‘But what if they attacked us in the street again, not at the house?’

  ‘They can probably put the detector on a person as well as on a house. And why would they attack you? That’s not going to get them anywhere.’

  ‘I don’t know if they’re that rational.’

  ‘If they’re setting up alibis for themselves, they sound pretty rational to me.’

  Flora puffed out a sigh.

  ‘Much as I hate to say it, I think Alec’s right. You can’t keep running away from them. You have to sort this. I know, easy for me to say…’

  Flora waited for Pippa’s offer to come back and help, but of course that didn’t materialise. Under the friendly charm, Pippa was one of the most selfish people she knew. Flora finished the call with a vague promise to keep Pippa updated.

  ‘And thanks a lot,’ she muttered as she strode back to the house to break open the Hobnobs for the CCTV men.

  It was no good tackling Neil directly about leaving. She would have to be more subtle than that – make him think he’d come round to the idea on his own. So over the next two days she didn’t even mention the possibility, pretending she was satisfied now they had the CCTV and continuing to bombard Saskia with voice and text messages which went unanswered.

  Just before bed on Wednesday night, sitting with Neil on the sofa in the Family Room watching a Danish series on BBC Four, she mentioned, casually, that she’d called Pippa.

  ‘Oh? How’s she doing?’

  ‘She seemed fine. She was talking about this new tagging system where the perpetrator wears an electronic tag that sets off an alarm if they come near the person who’s being targeted, or their house…’

  Neil’s expression became irritatingly patient and courteous. ‘Uh-huh?’

  But he was saved from having to humour her further by the door flying open.

  Beckie erupted into the room in a blur of purple pyjamas and flying hair. ‘There’s a man!’

  Neil bolted from the sofa. ‘Where?’

  ‘In the garden!’

  ‘Flora, get into the loo! Got your phone? Call 999.’

  Hugging Beckie to her, Flora locked them both in the downstairs loo, which had the twin benefits of a lock
on the door and a tiny high window. Flora had decorated it in a bright quirky yellow and hung the Larrson cartoon of the two crocodiles relaxing after dining on canoeist in a prominent position above the towel rail. How could she ever have found that funny?

  Beckie looked up at her as she tapped the 9 on her phone. ‘It was him again. It was that man. I heard someone shouting and I looked out and that man was there!’

  Chapter 22

  ‘And then there’s Mr Bean running at me like a spastic that’s shat itself.’ Travis takes another swally of lager and puts his other hand up the inside of Mackenzie’s thigh. She’s on his lap, wriggling against him like he’s her fucking hero. ‘And then he’s tripping on a stane, flat on his fucking face, and I cannae get up the wall for pissing myself. And he’s all “Stop right there my man” and I make like I’m gonnae jump back down and he’s bricking it.’

  Connor’s in the kitchen making us coffees, but he’s earwigging, and I can see him through the door having a wee chuckle to hisself.

  ‘Magic,’ goes Jed.

  I point at Travis. ‘You’d better no have frighted Bekki.’

  ‘Bekki wasnae there.’

  ‘And no touching they bastards. We want them bricking it, aye, but no so they’re gonnae up and go.’

  ‘I didnae touch no one!’

  Connor comes in with the coffees, lattes for him and Carly and Mandy, flat blacks for Ryan and Jed, a wee cappuccino for me. Mackenzie’s on the ginger.

  Connor’s put a wee bit Flake on the side. I dip it in the foam and lick it. That coffee machine’s barry so it is. ‘Right Connor, me and you’s off to St Andrews the morn.’

  Connor sits on the floor with the dug, his back against Mandy’s chair, and Mandy pats him on the heid like he’s a dug an’ all. ‘Thanks Wee Man.’ She’s eating a packet of prawn cocktail with her latte, the mad cow.

  ‘Cannae do the morn,’ goes Connor. ‘I’ve got my shift.’

  ‘Pull a sickie, son.’

  Connor’s got a foam moustache on him. He doesnae lick it off like Travis would, he gets a bit tissue out his pocket and dabs it. ‘Cannae. I’m already on a verbal.’

  ‘What for?’ goes Carly.

  ‘Absenteeism.’

  ‘Oh, absenteeism,’ goes Travis.

  ‘You can get cream for that,’ goes Ryan.

  ‘Who cares about your fucking job?’ goes Carly. ‘By the time they get round to a written warning you’ll be Bye bye wankers any road. You numptie, Connor.’

  ‘Aye, but.’

  ‘Carly’s right enough,’ I goes. ‘For once in her fucking life. You’re wasted on they fuckers, son. Get me the Flora shite.’

  Connor gets up and goes to the sideboard and gets out the red folder. He printed it all off of the internet – the newspaper articles about Flora’s maw’s death. How many folk are there in Scotland, in the fucking world, so shite-for-brains they’ve got themselves run over by a fucking milk float? There’s only one Connor could find in the UK – Elizabeth Innes in St Andrews, back in 1989, address 24 Turner Drive.

  So the bitch was Ruth Innes before she married Alec Morrison.

  Whatever it is that bitch is hiding, we’re finding it.

  Then Connor goes, ‘Motor,’ and Ryan’s up next him at the windae.

  ‘Well wouldn’t you know,’ goes Ryan. ‘Mr Bean hisself.’

  ‘Right yous.’ I hear a car door slam, not real loud, like it’s across the street maybe. ‘Yous laddies dinnae move. Carly-hen, get out there. Connor, film it on your phone, aye? He’s gonnae assault you, darlin’, right? Connor, get that windae open for sound, and get filming.’

  Mandy joins Ryan and Connor and me at the windae, still shoving prawn cocktail in her gob. Mr Bean’s crossing the street and Carly’s got her fat arse down the path to the gate, blocking his way, and he’s all ‘Let me past please’ and he tries to breenge past and Carly shouts out like he’s just shoved a knife in her chebs and falls back against the gate like a right hammy cow and then she’s lying on the ground holding her belly giving it ‘The babby! The babby!’

  ‘Thanks Flora, that was lush,’ said Caroline, bringing the empty soup bowls and the plates over to the sink. ‘You’re such a feeder.’

  ‘The least I can do is feed you. Other than that I’m all take take take.’

  ‘Hey, don’t be daft. Happy to help. Give it a few months and it’ll be me having some kind of crisis. Tony lining me up as his next victim, or oh God Flora, you won’t want to know me when I’m in a dysfunctional relationship – I’m well overdue falling for a bastard – over here crying on your shoulder every five minutes. Being fed homemade soup and bread, hopefully.’

  Flora smiled. Thank God for Caroline. ‘I think that could be arranged.’

  She squirted washing-up liquid into the sink.

  Caroline twitched a tea towel from the rail of the Aga. ‘It might not even come to court, you know.’

  ‘But what was he thinking going over there in the first place? What did he think it would achieve?’

  ‘He was angry.’

  She’d never seen him so angry. At himself, she thought, as much as anything – at the way that yob had taunted him in their own garden. At the effect it had had on Beckie. After the police had arrived and he’d given his statement, he’d disappeared off in his car – to cool down, she’d thought, to take himself off away from Beckie so as not to upset her any more than she was already. Never mind Flora. Never mind leaving her to deal with the fallout, to explain to the police why he’d taken off like that.

  She’d been furious with him even before she’d found out what had happened at 34 Meadowlands Crescent.

  But actually getting charged with assault?

  She clattered the cutlery into the sink.

  Assault of a pregnant woman?

  ‘It’s almost like they planned it, eh?’ Caroline mused. ‘It’s almost like they’ve been taunting you, trying to get you to react...’

  ‘That’s what Neil thinks too. But are they really that clever?’ She swirled the little brush around a soup bowl and, without bothering to rinse, banged it down on the draining board.

  Caroline picked it up, shaking off the suds. ‘Maybe not. They probably just made use of the opportunity, when Neil appeared at their door...’

  ‘But – the bloody cheek of it! They’ve applied for a restraining order against us?’ She slammed the other bowl down. ‘And the CCTV didn’t even pick Travis Johnson up – the cameras at the back don’t cover that bit of the garden, next the wall at the bottom. All you see on the footage is Neil running across the grass like a maniac... It’s almost as if they knew where the cameras were – as if they’ve been watching the house, watching where the cameras were directed…’

  ‘I suppose that’s possible,’ Caroline said doubtfully.

  ‘We need ammunition against them. We really need it!’

  ‘Saskia still not answering?’

  Flora shook her head.

  ‘Maybe there’s a problem with her phone. It sounds like, the state she’s in, she could have lost it, or stopped paying for it, or it’s muffled under a pile of dirty laundry or whatever. Do you have any other way of contacting her?’

  ‘Nope, other than just turning up at her flat.’ She stared at Caroline. ‘And why haven’t I just done that? What’s stopping me driving over there now…’

  ‘Well, you have to collect Beckie from school in…’ Caroline consulted her watch ‘about an hour. But you could get over there tomorrow, couldn’t you? I could pick Beckie up.’

  ‘Would you?’

  ‘No problemo – I’m working from home. And it’s always good to spend time with the Beckster.’

  ‘Thanks, Caroline. Thank you so much.’

  ‘And look, I wouldn’t worry about these charges against Neil – any sheriff worth his or her salt is going to see through them. And I doubt the restraining order will be granted either. That little minx probably has a record as long as your arm. She’s probably accusing people o
f assaulting her all the time.’

  ‘Maybe.’

  ‘Now – let’s have a look at this CCTV. I want to see myself on camera.’

  The bank of screens had been set up in Neil’s study, ranged above his desk like he was Mr Spock in the Star Ship Enterprise. The screens showed the front and back gardens from various angles, and also views of the house, every door and window covered.

  ‘Wow,’ said Caroline.

  ‘It’s all very state of the art, apparently.’ She sat down in Neil’s swivelly chair and keyed in the password. ‘See, we can switch any of the cameras off and on...’ She clicked on the one looking out onto the street, and the screen went blank. She clicked on it again and the picture was back. ‘And change the direction they point in...’ She swivelled it to look off down the road. ‘Either using this computer or our phones.’

  ‘Excellent! And cute little bonsai trees.’ Caroline was looking at Mimi’s tank on the windowsill.

  ‘Mm, that’s...’ But Flora didn’t have the strength to explain Mimi the Mycorrhiza. ‘Botany stuff. Okay, so footage of the front door about an hour ago…’ She navigated through the menu, and on the screen there appeared a shot of Caroline, hood up against the rain, opening the gate and coming towards the front door, and running her tongue over her teeth before ringing the bell.

  ‘Oh God – look at me checking for remnants of Jaffa cake!’

  She looked as attractive as ever – and as if Jaffa cakes never passed her glossy lips.

  ‘And you can see Ailish’s house!’ Caroline pointed at the screen on the far left showing the current feed for the front door. ‘As if the Chipmunk Show wasn’t more than enough exposure!’

  The camera in the hedge covering the front door also gave a partial view into Ailish and Iain’s front garden. Right on cue – she did her main shop after lunch every Thursday – Ailish’s car had just pulled in at her gate. They watched her get out and open the boot, then turn and stare at the camera as if she’d suddenly seen it – but surely that was impossible? It was tiny, and hidden in the hedge.

 

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