Damaged Goods

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Damaged Goods Page 2

by Helen Black


  ‘I do, but you understand this: your “product” is not satisfactory, and if you think I will buy inferior goods you really don’t know me.’

  Oh I know you. I know you better than you think.

  ‘I’ve got some more I know you’re gonna like. How about I drop them round tomorrow.’

  A spark shone in Barrows’ eyes. ‘Young?’

  ‘Very.’

  CHAPTER TWO

  Tuesday, 8 September

  Lilly sniffed at the milk, which was two days past its sell-by date, and poured it over some cereal.

  ‘What’s that?’ asked Sam.

  ‘Special K.’

  He turned the empty packet around in his hands as if it were the latest must-have electro gadget. ‘Can I have some?’

  ‘There’s only enough for me.’

  ‘Please.’

  Lilly kissed the crown of her son’s head. ‘Frankly, I don’t think you need to lose weight.’

  Five minutes later Lilly picked at some Shreddies while Sam polished off the bowl of Special K.

  ‘What time is it?’ Lilly asked.

  Sam squinted at his new watch.

  ‘Put your glasses on,’ said Lilly.

  Sam sighed and rummaged through his pockets. Lilly was about to point out how much better it would be to keep them in their case when she saw her own pair lying lens down on the draining board.

  ‘Bart is pointing to eight and Homer’s nearly on six.’

  ‘Shit!’

  ‘That’s a bad word,’ said Sam.

  ‘Thank you, Mary Whitehouse.’

  ‘Who?’

  Lilly scrambled across the kitchen to the cupboard above the fridge to shove the cereal boxes back inside. ‘Never mind. We’re late, get your shoes on.’ In her hurry she tripped over the Lego fortress set up last night, banged her elbow against the fridge and scattered Shreddies across the tiled floor.

  ‘Uh oh.’

  ‘Hurry!’ Lilly yelled, and crunched her way to the door.

  The school grounds were deserted, devoid of the usual melee of babbling mums vying for a place to park. Had everyone been and gone? Surely they weren’t that late? As she wondered, Lilly cast around for a plausible explanation to appease Mrs Thomas, the omnipotent Head of House, and checked the time on her mobile. Five past eight.

  ‘Five past eight? You said it was …’

  She looked at Sam.

  ‘Just joking.’

  At 8.45 a.m. Lilly left the school grounds and drove towards the village of Little Markham. She yawned and decided to go back home for a cup of tea. She had an appointment with Kelsey at ten so there was time to spare, even enough to call for a paper, but as she entered the newsagent’s her mobile rang. Lilly checked the number of the caller and her heart sank.

  The voice at the other end chirped like one of the budgies Lilly’s nan used to keep. Sammy, Davis and Junior had spent their days pecking Trill and making a high-pitched racket. It was so grating that Nan used to put a gingham cover over the cage in the afternoon to fool the noisy buggers into going to sleep.

  ‘Hi, it’s me,’ said David. Lilly wished she could put a cover over her ex-husband.

  ‘Is it about tonight?’

  ‘Yeah. Cara’s just surprised me with tickets to the opera,’ he said.

  Lilly counted to ten. ‘It’s your evening to see Sam.’

  ‘I know. She must have totally forgotten.’

  Of course she did. After all, it must be such a stretch to keep track of her manicures and facials, how could she be expected to remember trivia?

  ‘I’m supposed to be seeing a client,’ said Lilly.

  ‘Can’t you get a sitter?’

  ‘I could, but Sam wants to see his father.’

  ‘You know I’ll make it up to him,’ said David.

  Lilly couldn’t be bothered to argue.

  ‘I’ll get him a programme,’ David said.

  ‘La Traviata, I’m sure he’ll be chuffed.’

  Lilly paid for three chocolate bars and stalked out of the shop. The assistant waved the newspaper she’d left on the counter but Lilly was too distracted to notice. As he put it back on the rack he shook his head at the headline:

  PROSTITUTE BUTCHERED.

  POLICE SUSPECT SERIAL KILLER.

  People today were out of control, he thought.

  ‘I think I have low self-esteem. Sometimes, when I’m in a room full of people I feel unable to speak. I think they won’t want to listen to anything I’ve got to say. Do you understand, Doctor?’

  William Barrows nodded but he wasn’t listening either. He had no interest in her stupid problems. He couldn’t even look at her directly without feeling ill. Her gnarled hands and wrinkled skin repulsed him.

  As she droned on he fantasised about hurting her, ripping her apart and causing inexplicable pain. Sometimes he couldn’t contain his fury, but today he internalised it, hid it deep within his core.

  As soon as his patient left, Barrows threw open a window to rid his office of her smell. Piss, sweat and halitosis. Even with the air-conditioning on full blast the stench of her decaying body made him gag.

  He looked outside to the street below where the nasty little black man was waiting. He wouldn’t come in until he had to, his distaste of Barrows was too acute. Let the fool bake in the sun.

  Barrows left the window, sat at his computer and made a swift exit from the site he had last visited. ‘Modern psychiatry in practice’ held little interest. Instead he went to his favourites in the hope of something fresh, but nothing new had been posted since yesterday.

  Barrows drummed his fingers. There was insufficient time for what he really wanted, but could he resist? Self-denial had never been a virtue.

  He wandered over to the cabinet beside the television and video recorder. He opened the doors and ran his forefinger along the meticulous rows of video cassettes. Each in exact line with its neighbours, each with its title printed neatly on the side. He let his hand hover over ‘Girl Sucking Thumb’ but moved on to ‘Nervous Redhead’.

  Decisions, decisions. At last he smiled and selected ‘Shy Princess’.

  He always named the films after his co-stars.

  Max waited outside the building. He pulled down a baseball cap to shield his eyes from the hard sun and lit a joint. The weed was good, but he yearned for something stronger.

  A woman emerged from the clinic, presumably one of Barrows’ patients. Her clothes were smart and her hair shone. She certainly didn’t look mad, but you never could tell. Max guessed she was about twenty-five.

  When he could put it off no longer, Max flicked the roach into the gutter and made his way inside.

  It was a game. Barrows always waited until he was sure Max had seen what was playing before he turned off the video.

  Max knew his discomfort amused Barrows. He pretended not to see the young girl on the screen, her tiara glittering, her vagina exposed, but his flinch gave him away.

  He handed two ‘audition tapes’ to Barrows, together with a handful of photographs. If Barrows liked one of the girls he would instruct Max to set the wheels in motion for a film session, and Barrows would pay handsomely.

  The money was everything to Max, the only way out of this shit-hole of a life. For as long as he could remember he’d been trying to save up enough to leave the estate, to put distance between himself and the filth he saw all around him. Thieving, dealing, pimping, he’d done the lot, still did if an opportunity came his way. But this stuff, the kids and Barrows, made good money, more than the rest put together. It was his ticket to freedom. Of course, he still squirmed when Barrows played the tapes and ran his fingers over the Polaroids, and he still felt relief for those girls Barrows rejected. But business was business.

  ‘I wasn’t sure I should come. Maybe we should both be keeping our heads down,’ said Max.

  Barrows was dismissive. ‘The woman’s dead. Problem solved.’

  He discarded the first tape within seconds, but the second re
tained his attention. His top lip trembled in appreciation of the girl larking about on a swing, nervously pulling at her silver boob tube.

  Max wanted to smash every bone in Barrows’ body, but contented himself with smashing the man’s arrogance.

  ‘Grace may be dead, but the daughter ain’t.’

  Satisfied with Barrows’ reaction, he left.

  Max sat in his car. He’d enjoyed the look on that sicko’s face. He knew full well that Kelsey would never grass, but Barrows didn’t. The switch of power felt good, and yet it was not enough to expel the inevitable dread he felt as he anticipated the introduction of another child into Barrows’ world.

  As a child himself, Max had known he was dirty and unworthy of anyone’s love. And as the years wore on, the layers of filth increased, until they were all that held him together.

  He placed a small rock of crack cocaine into a pipe, put the flame of his lighter to it and inhaled as deeply as he could. The smoke rushed through him, minty cool yet white hot. It cleansed him from the inside out and peeled away the layers to reveal the man beneath. A pure man. A fearless man. A man without blood on his hands.

  He bared his teeth at the world around him and laughed out loud. ‘You can’t touch me.’

  All too soon the effects lessened and the dirt began to seep back into him until his pores were clogged and the layers had re-established themselves. He bit down hard on his bottom lip to recover some feeling, and pulled out his mobile phone to send a text to the girl in the video. After all, she was no angel, she knew the score, so no harm done.

  Anyway, this was his last one. Barrows didn’t know it yet but he was going to pay double for the girl in the boob tube, and Max would have enough money to get the hell out of here.

  Lilly laughed to herself when she arrived outside The Bushes. The scene was a classic. Kids milled in and out of the unit, beside themselves with excitement. Others leaned out of their bedroom windows and shouted to those below.

  Surprisingly, Miriam stood apart from the throng. Perhaps she had decided to let the furore run its course. A risky tactic given how easily and regularly things got out of hand. The presence of Jack McNally’s squad car confirmed Lilly’s suspicions that something had really kicked off.

  ‘Trouble in paradise?’ she asked Miriam.

  Miriam didn’t smile. ‘Kelsey’s mum is dead.’

  ‘Shit.’

  ‘You need to talk to Jack.’

  ‘Has he told you what happened?’ asked Lilly.

  ‘Not much, just that the police want to speak to Kelsey.’

  Miriam placed her hand in the small of Lilly’s back and steered her towards the building. ‘You need to get moving.’

  Lilly eyed her friend. Where was the fire? ‘I’m not sure what I can do except hold the poor kid’s hand.’

  ‘Bugger that. She needs a solicitor and preferably one with her head screwed on.’

  Miriam’s tone worried Lilly. The beloved and almost soporific calm had vanished, and in its place was something Lilly didn’t recognise, at least not in Miriam.

  ‘Is Kelsey all right?’ Lilly asked.

  ‘Wake up, girl, they’re saying she did it. The police think Kelsey murdered her mum.’

  * * *

  Lilly was always pleased to see Jack. Among the myriad professionals she worked with in child protection he could be relied upon to let common sense prevail and, like her, see the funny side of things.

  They’d met on Christmas Eve, five or maybe six years ago, when Jack nicked one of her clients for stealing three tins of Roses from Woolies. The kid had denied it even when Jack played the CCTV footage showing the tiny figure tottering out of the door, his mountain of chocolate swaying precariously, his Santa hat askew.

  As Lilly began to fear ever leaving the station, Jack had sent the kid packing with a telling off and a fiver.

  Since then their paths had crossed so often they felt like old friends.

  It didn’t hurt that he looked so good either. Tall and thin with the dress sense of Boris Johnson wasn’t every woman’s dream, but Jack’s thick dark hair, perfect skin and soulful eyes did it for Lilly. A mild flirtation with a handsome man eased the endless hours waiting in courtrooms. Harmless, yet highly effective.

  He greeted her warmly, but they both understood that the gravity of the situation made their usual banter inappropriate.

  ‘What’s the story, Jack?’ she asked.

  Jack slouched in the door frame, his battered leather jacket thrown over his left shoulder, the collar hooked under his thumb. ‘We need a word with Kelsey.’

  Lilly smiled. If anyone could play things down it was Jack. The Irish melody of his voice lent itself to a light mood.

  ‘No can do. She swallowed a bottle of bleach and her mouth is burnt to shit, she won’t be able to speak for a few weeks.’

  ‘She can write her answers,’ he reasoned.

  ‘Is that any way to conduct an interview with a traumatised fourteen-year-old kid?’ she asked.

  Jack sighed. He’d obviously anticipated this line of attack. ‘Not my call, Lilly.’

  When he said her name it sounded like a song and she had to fight the urge to plant a kiss squarely on his lips.

  ‘Don’t talk rubbish. You’ve got enough clout at the nick to stop some smart arse in CID from hounding children,’ she said.

  ‘This is a murder investigation, Lilly, no one’s interested in my opinion,’ he replied.

  It was Lilly’s turn to sigh, and Jack seemed to take this as confirmation that she knew it was futile to argue.

  ‘This whole thing will be less painful if you cooperate,’ he said, his eyes shining not with triumph but with relief at Lilly’s apparent acquiescence.

  She pushed past him and went inside. ‘Bullshit.’

  Lilly opened the bedroom door. Kelsey was sitting in exactly the same position Lilly had left her almost twenty-four hours earlier. It was if the child hadn’t moved. Lilly felt again the enormity of the situation. How can you represent a kid who can’t tell you anything? Avoidance tactics were her best bet.

  ‘Kelsey, this is Jack McNally. He’s a copper.’ Lilly flashed a charming smile. ‘He wants to ask you some questions.’

  Jack returned the smile. His voice was low and deliberate. ‘That’s right. I’ll drive you to the station myself.’

  ‘So you’ll need to get a psychiatrist,’ Lilly said.

  ‘What?’

  Lilly shrugged as if her proposal were obvious. ‘There must be a question mark over Kelsey’s stability and whether she’s able to sit through an interview.’

  ‘On what basis do you say that?’ he asked.

  ‘Oh, I don’t know – perhaps because Kelsey drank a bottle of bleach a couple of days ago and she’s just been told her mother’s been murdered.’

  Jack stiffened. ‘Are you saying you won’t allow an interview to take place until she’s been certified fit?’

  ‘Not at all. You know as well as I do that I can’t stop you doing anything. I’d just be surprised if an experienced child protection officer like yourself would speak to a juvenile before assuring himself that to do so wouldn’t be harmful.’

  ‘A few questions aren’t going to hurt,’ he said.

  ‘Are you sure?’

  Lilly glanced at the miserable creature sat at the end of her bed. Her head was buried in her chest, the crown, thick with dandruff, the only thing visible. Jack had walked right into this one.

  ‘Has she said or done anything to lead you to believe that now is a good time, Jack?’

  ‘I’ll call the Gov.’

  Ten minutes later, Lilly stirred a coffee and placed it in front of Jack. ‘What did he say?’

  ‘We can’t get a psychiatrist today.’

  Lilly already knew that the official police shrink was in court giving evidence on one of her other cases and that his assistant was sitting one of her final exams.

  Jack gave a half-smile. ‘We managed an educational psychologist.’
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br />   ‘Totally inappropriate,’ Lilly said.

  ‘Figured you’d say that and told the DI to send him home.’

  Lilly couldn’t resist a smile but could see Jack’s patience was wearing thin.

  ‘This isn’t a game, Lilly,’ he said.

  ‘No shit.’

  He fixed her with a hostile glare. ‘Grace was found in her flat by another prostitute hoping to borrow some money. The poor girl’s still in shock.’

  ‘Cause of death?’ Lilly asked.

  ‘Her head had been smashed and her body was covered in knife wounds,’ he said.

  ‘There goes my OD theory.’

  Jack drew himself up. Lilly’s attempts at humour were patently annoying him. He rummaged in his bag, pulled out the scene-of-crime photos and slapped them onto the table between them.

  ‘Whoever did this is dangerous.’

  It was Lilly’s turn to be annoyed. The attempt to get her on side was a parlour trick.

  ‘Goodness, Officer, now you’ve shown me what a monster my client is I’ll advise her to confess.’

  ‘No one’s looking for a confession,’ he said.

  ‘Of course you are, Jack. You’ve got no evidence.’

  ‘What makes you say that?’

  ‘If you’d anything strong to say Kelsey did that,’ Lilly gestured to the photographs, ‘none of us would be sitting here. The DI would have nicked her himself and the first I’d have heard about it was when she got her phone call from the station.’

  ‘You’re a cynic,’ he said.

  ‘I’m a realist,’ she replied. ‘Kelsey’s a suspect for no other reason than she’s family and has a motive. The fact that the DI sent you tells me the interview is important. Softly softly catchy monkey. If Kelsey squeals there’s to be no room for me to object because you’ll need to rely on it.’

  Jack’s shoulders drooped as the truth of what she was saying hit him. His naivety reminded Lilly that he was one of the good guys.

 

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