by Zoe Sharp
“I’m sorry,” I said quickly, giving him a way out with honour along with an apologetic smile. I had to tilt my head back to look up at him and I was no short-stop. “I’ve just ridden down here like a bat out of hell believing one of my oldest friends was dead.” I shrugged. “But it was still thoughtless of me.”
He nodded at that, little more than a ducking of his head. On impulse I stuck my hand out.
“Charlie Fox,” I said. He took it and shook it, gently, his fingers engulfing mine.
“William,” he said in grudging response.
“Just William?”
There was a pause, then his face cracked in spite of himself. The smile lightened him up by about ten years and took him several notches down the threat scale at the same time. “Yeah,” he said. “Just William.”
Pauline introduced herself, too, then announced she was going to roust the medical staff again for more news. Sam had been hovering nervously while this exchange took place. “I’ll get coffee,” he offered and scurried away before I could do more than nod and smile at him.
William watched him leave with a shrewd stare. “I see your mate’s enough of a New Man to let you stand up for yourself,” he said wryly. Now he’d relaxed I could hear the culture in his voice, close to the lazy drawl of the wealthy classes.
“Sam knows his limitations,” I said. “But don’t underestimate him. He may not like physical confrontations, but he could beat your computer to death with one hand tied behind his back.”
William nodded and the humour left his face as the conversation died away.
“I’m sorry about your friend,” I said. “Who was he?”
“His name was Simon Grannell,” he said simply, “but everybody called him Slick.”
The name tickled at the back of my memory but I couldn’t put a face to it. “So, what happened, do you know?” I asked.
“Not sure. We got there not long after,” he said, sounding both tired and angry, running a hand over the top of his scalp. “Slick was already toast and your lady friend was still lying in the middle of the road. I damned near ran over her, too.”
Despite the heat my arms went cold enough to sprout instant goosebumps. “‘Too’?” I said.
“Yeah.” He nodded. “I’m no expert but it looked like something went over her after they hit the deck.”
“Jesus,” I muttered under my breath. “I suppose her Ducati’s totalled?”
“Ducati?” William frowned. “What Ducati? Slick’s bike was a Suzuki streetfighter. They were on that.”
Slick Grannell and a streetfighter Suzuki. Now I remembered him. One of the flashy group of riders who liked to show off at the local bikers’ haunt near Kirkby Lonsdale.
The last time I’d seen him was probably one mild dry Sunday in early July, setting off from Devil’s Bridge like the lights had just gone green on his own personal drag strip and someone else was picking up the tab on his tyres. An idle thought had crossed my mind at the time that he was heading for a fall. I never expected for a moment that he’d take my best friend with him.
For a moment I said nothing but something started niggling at the back of my mind. Clare had passed her bike test before she learned to drive a car and I’d never known her willingly ride pillion. She hated it. Yet there she’d been, out on the back of this guy Slick’s bike when I could have sworn she thought he was as big an idiot as I did.
“What the hell was Clare doing out with Slick?” I asked.
William glanced at me sharply, as though maybe he sensed the implied criticism of his mate. “I don’t know,” he said. He saw my expression and was back to his grim-faced look again. “I just want to find out what happened to them,” he said, “and she’s the only one who can fill in the blanks.”
Pauline reappeared at that moment and I glanced at her, hopeful, but she shook her head. “They aren’t for telling me anything,” she said.
“Right,” I said, determined. “My turn.”
***
“Look, I appreciate that you’re concerned for your friend, but there really is nothing I can tell you beyond the fact we’re doing everything we can.”
The doctor finished making some illegible scrawl on her clipboard and almost threw it down onto the cluttered desk. She barely seemed out of her teens but she must have passed out top in her class for stubbornness. She was frail and slender and looked tired down to her bones.
The pager in the pocket of her white coat went off and she picked it out, reading the display distractedly, then shut it off. Her attention was already somewhere else. I touched her sleeve, enough to bring her back to me.
“OK,” I said quickly. “I know I’m not family but to me Clare is family. Closer than family. I understand her legs are smashed. Can you at least tell me if it’s as bad as I’ve heard?”
The young doctor’s eyes flicked down to where my fingers rested on her arm, then up to meet my gaze again and I saw wariness replace exasperation. I took my hand back. She sighed noisily and pushed a lank strand of hair out of her eyes.
“Yes, it’s bad,” she said at last, the admission seeming to sap the last of her meagre energy. She stuck her hands into her pockets, pulling her shoulders down, too.
I shrugged helplessly. “So – will she walk?”
“That depends,” the doctor said, stony, “on whether we can save her legs.”
She paused and must have seen the blank shock in my face. She let her breath out heavily, took pity on me. “Look, your friend came in with her pelvic girdle completely fractured in three places. Before we could do anything else we had to put her in an ex-fix in A&E to stabilise her. You know what one of those is, right?”
“Right,” I said. You can’t ride a bike and not have seen people hobbling round with their busted limbs wired back together in an external fixator.
She eyed me for a moment before she went on. “I won’t go into technical details, but basically your friend’s left femur is in too many pieces to count. Her right’s not as bad but it’s still a mess. If whatever vehicle that hit them had run over her torso instead of her legs, she’d be dead right now. As it is, she’s got nerve and blood vessel damage to both limbs. If we can’t repair it—” she shrugged, “—she’ll lose her legs.”
I was silent for a moment. “Would it help if you had the best orthopaedic surgeon in the country to work on her – someone who specialises in motorcycle injuries?”
She bridled at that, waving me away. “I can assure you that the surgical team here is excellent—”
“As good as Richard Foxcroft?”
She began to form an affirmative reply on a reflex, then stopped as the name went in. “Mr Foxcroft?” she said and the wariness was back in full force. She threw me a short, assessing gaze. “He used to be one of the consultants here but I can’t—”
I grabbed a pen from her clipboard and scrawled a rapid set of digits across the corner of a sheet of paper, ripping it off and handing it to her. “That’s his home number,” I said. “He could be here in an hour and a half. Will you at least call him and see what he says?”
She was eyeing me now with outright suspicion, fingering the torn scrap I’d given her. The temptation was clear but she was still dubious. “And how do I explain to Mr Foxcroft where I got hold of this?” she demanded.
I gave her my most winning smile. “Tell him it came from his daughter,” I said.
***
Half the secret of being pushy is knowing when to stop pushing and let the weight of your argument roll all by itself. I went back to the waiting area prepared to dig in for the long haul.
Sam had returned successful from his coffee-gathering foray and seemed to have broken the ice a little with William. When I reappeared they were sitting talking about their own past accidents and lucky escapes, their faces sober.
It was the kind of talk bikers always seem to fall back on at times like these. Any moment now, one of them was going to show the other his scars. I hoped nobody asked to see mine or w
e’d be here all night.
Sam looked up at my approach, mirroring the hopeful expression I’d worn earlier myself, but I shook my head. I wasn’t quite willing to share the news that Clare might be facing amputation, not quite yet. Not until the young doctor had made that phone call, at any rate.
“Where’s Pauline?” I asked.
“Gone to see if she can track down Jacob,” Sam said. “He’s not answering at home or on his mobile. Pauline said she’d have a run out to Caton and see if the Range Rover’s outside the house.”
The jacket pocket of William’s leathers started playing the theme from Mission: Impossible. He got to his feet, bringing out a mobile phone, and moved away to take the call before the nurses could pounce on him. I took his seat beside Sam.
“So what are you up to these days?” Sam asked then, handing me a coffee. “You’ve been right off the map since the winter.”
I nodded my thanks. “Not much at the moment,” I said, evasive. “Apart from working on the cottage, of course. It belongs to my parents, really. I’m just sorting out the renovations for them and in return I get to live there rent free.”
If I’d hoped that might distract him, it didn’t work. He was regarding me with those sorrowful spaniel’s eyes of his. Eyes that didn’t miss much.
“Rumour had it you’d gone off to be a mercenary and were either dead or in prison.” He said the words with a smile that wasn’t entirely present in his voice.
“Interesting,” I returned, neutral, dipping my nose into my coffee cup again. And close, I thought. “But wrong on all counts.”
“But you’re still tied up with that Meyer bloke, aren’t you.”
It was posed more as an accusation than a question and there was enough hint of sulkiness in Sam’s tone to bring my head round in surprise.
“If you mean Sean, then yes I am,” I agreed calmly, watching him flush and allow our eye contact to slide. “You seem very well informed on the subject.”
He squirmed a little at that. “Yeah well, it just seems kind of odd that this guy turns up out of the blue and next thing I know you’ve gone off gallivanting all over the world with him.”
I refrained from reminding Sam that, not only had I never for a moment given him any cause to believe he was more than just a friend to me, but also that I’d do as I damn well pleased.
“Sean and I were in the army together. We go way back,” I said instead, deliberate, too irritated by his moody behaviour to much care how he put that one together. “He runs his own close protection agency now. I needed a job. He offered me one. I took it.”
What I didn’t add was that my first proper assignment in the States that spring had gone terribly wrong and since then I’d been in a kind of limbo, both with Sean and with my fledgling newfound career. Over the last few months I’d felt almost as though I was watching life from the sidelines without joining in. It was not, I recognised, a state of affairs that could go on much longer.
Sam drained the last of his own coffee and crumpled the plastic cup between his fingers, taking his time over it.
“You’ve changed, Charlie,” he said then, rather sadly.
I glanced at him.
“Yeah well,” I said. “Everything does.”
***
Sam might have been about to say more but at that moment a mismatched couple came storming down the corridor and burst into the waiting area.
The guy was short and squat with huge sloping shoulders inside his badge-covered leather jacket. He had big hands tattooed with snakes and old engine oil and he looked like a brawler. The scar from what was most likely a long-time healed glassing stretched the left-hand side of his upper lip back slightly, giving him a permanent sneer.
With him was a small woman, so slightly built she must have been able to pick her wardrobe from children’s departments. She had a lot of piercings and long dark hair that was scraped back and held tight almost at her crown by a scrunchie. So many silver bangles dangled out of the sleeves of her tasselled leather jacket that she jingled when she moved.
Beside me, Sam murmured, “Uh-oh,” under his breath and I raised an eyebrow at him. “Slick’s missus,” he added, catching the look.
I hadn’t known Slick had a regular girlfriend, never mind someone who was permanent enough to qualify as a wife. He’d never behaved as though he had any commitments, that’s for sure.
Now, she came storming across the waiting area heading straight for William, with the big biker stalking in her wake.
“What the fuck was he up to, William?” she demanded, her voice harsh and shrill. She was, I realised, quite a bit older than her first impression. There were deep lines etched in round her eyes and from the outer edges of her nostrils down to the corners of her mouth.
“We don’t know any more than you do, Tess,” William said, sounding snappy rather than sympathetic.
Tess was shivering violently. She gave a sniff, wiping her face with the back of her hand. I winced in case the bundle of silver rings on her fingers became entangled with the pewter ones in her nose but, remarkably perhaps, she came away unsnared.
“Stupid bastard,” she muttered bitterly. “How could he do this to me? Just when he was about to do something right for once, he chucks it all away over some blonde bimbo.”
There was enough blonde in my own hair for me to feel included in that insult. I got to my feet and moved in deliberately. The big biker who’d arrived with Tess took one look at my face and put himself between us.
It would have been easy to dismiss him just as muscle, but the eyes that stared out of his slightly flattened face like two hard grey pebbles were bright with intelligence.
“Leave it, Tess,” he snapped, the way you’d speak to a dog. “We dunno what happened to Slick.”
William looked momentarily surprised at this reasoned argument. “Yeah, Tess. Don’t say or do anything in haste you might have cause to regret at leisure,” he said, with a meaningful glance in my direction. “Like while you’re having your jaw wired back together, hmm?”
A picture floated into my head of Slick’s grinning, cocksure face. I would have sworn Clare had been just as disdainful of him. I could see him on that flashy gold and blue custom-painted bike of his, setting off just about every time up on the back wheel. Always close to the edge. This time over it.
“No way would Clare ever cheat on Jacob, so before you start accusing her of anything,” I said, making an attempt to keep my voice level and hearing the sting the effort of doing so was putting into it, “you might want to think about the fact that Slick Grannell was asking for trouble.”
Tess’s face darkened and she took a step forwards, bristling. With the hairstyle and the thin pointed features the overall effect was that of a Yorkshire terrier on speed. It seemed to take her a moment to realise that neither of the two men had made any moves to back her up. She stopped and glared at them, then turned back to me.
“Oh yeah?” she jeered. “Well, if everything’s so lovey-dovey between them, why isn’t her old man here by her bedside?”
I didn’t have an immediate answer to that one but at that moment I heard footsteps along the corridor and turned, hoping for Jacob himself or, at second best, my father. Instead, it was Pauline who hurried back into the waiting area. She’d clearly caught the tail-end of the conversation and was staring at the group of us, white faced.
“Pauline!” I said, relieved. “Did you find Jacob?”
“No,” she said, shaking her head. “The house is locked up with the dogs still inside, and the car and Jacob’s bike were both there but . . .” She hesitated a moment, uncertain. “It’s like Jacob himself has just, well, disappeared.”
Two
I sat on one of the chairs in the now deserted waiting area, absently building a stack out of the empty paper cups from the coffee I’d drunk during the last five hours.
Maybe it was just the caffeine that had sent my mind into overdrive, flitting from one subject to another without seeming
able to concentrate on anything.
Still there was no news of Clare.
And no sign of Jacob.
Things hadn’t been quiet, though. I hadn’t quite come to blows with Slick’s widow, but that was more down to the intervention of his friends than any particular self-restraint on my part.
That and the fact that the police had chosen that moment to turn up, as I’d known they were bound to do at some point. Two uniforms, laden down with handcuffs and CS gas canisters and body armour, had swaggered into the waiting area.