by Anita Waller
Strategy
The eagerly anticipated sequel to the bestselling 34 Days
Anita Waller
Copyright © 2017 Anita Waller
The right of Anita Waller to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by her in accordance Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
First published in 2017 by Bloodhound Books
Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publisher or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
www.bloodhoundbooks.com
Contents
Also By Anita Waller
Prologue
Chapter 1
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
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Epilogue
A Note from Bloodhound Books:
Acknowledgments
Also By Anita Waller
The bestselling prequel to Strategy
34 Days
Other tiles also by Anita Waller
Angel
Beautiful
Winterscroft
Dedicated to the memory of
Bethan Anita Waller
(17.12.76–19.12.76)
The best laid schemes o’ mice an’ men
Gang aft a-gley
To a Mouse
Robert Burns (1759–1796)
Prologue
The image in the mirror was so different to the face she remembered as being her own. This reflection looked haunted, troubled and deeply sorrowful. The grey eyes, which had once sparkled with happiness, now resembled nimbus clouds, always verging on rainfall. Her long, blonde hair was gone, replaced by an untidy, short bob, dark brown and impossibly messy.
She stared into the mirror, wondering if anyone from her old life would recognise her now. She had dropped two dress sizes, appearing diminutive. Her choice in clothing had changed; she felt she lived in poorly cut, cheap jeans. Her shirts were so inexpensive, it was laughable, a travesty to fashion; a stark contrast to her wardrobe at Lindum Lodge, an overflow of designer labels and shoes for which most women would kill.
Would Mark have thrown everything out? she pondered. She guessed the answer would be yes. Once he had read the letters, her marriage was out of the window. Probably along with her precious clothes. And the one person to blame for all her worries and problems was Ray Carbrook. If he hadn’t been such a bastard, a rapist, wife-beater, there wouldn’t have been any need for the actions she had taken. When he had irrevocably ruined her that Friday afternoon, he had set things in motion for which he never accepted responsibility; it took eleven years to repay him, but she had done it. She regretted nothing about the death of Ray Carbrook, and if it hadn’t been necessary to kill him, she wouldn’t have had to kill the other two; he had a lot to answer for, her late father-in-law.
The letters hovered in her thoughts. She felt the shiver run through her body. Those bloody letters, a sort of Plan B, had been written to protect her and Anna’s family after the three murders of the previous year. She had carefully written them, detailing everything she had done to prevent accusations of complicity from anyone else in her family, from any accusations of murder on their part, if anything had gone wrong with her plans. Her big mistake had been in asking Anna to take care of them, because when she had asked Anna for them back, her mother-in-law had refused. If only Anna had handed them over, none of this would have happened.
She wouldn’t be staring at herself in a cracked mirror that came with the tiny flat she rented above a shop in Newark, and Anna wouldn’t be dead.
Anna, her mother-in-law, her friend, her alibi, dead because she had driven into a truck after driving away from Lindum Lodge, crushing her body in the wreckage; a whole life pouring away with the blood gushing out from a head wound accidentally inflicted by her.
She missed Anna, she missed Mark, she missed Adam and Grace, the two children who were her reason for living, but she didn’t miss Anna’s new husband, Mr. Bloody Perfect, Michael Groves. It angered her to remember the police had gone to him first with news of Anna’s death. It was that son of a bitch who had brought the letters to Mark, ruining every well-laid plan.
One day, she would face him, and she would hurt him; kill him, just like he had killed her life. He destroyed her family ties, separated her from her children. What did she have to lose, now? If the letters ever reached DI Gainsborough, it was game over anyway.
She had to have a strategy. There was only one way to have peace of mind, and that was to get the letters back in her keeping, and destroy them.
This would take some working out, and she would need money. Substantial money. But, it would happen, and she could get on with the rest of her life, and wait for her children to come back to her, because, really, that was what it was all about. She missed them; she ached for them. She needed them.
She continued to stare into the mirror, the crack that went from the top right to the bottom left bisecting her face across her nose. She wondered if she would ever smile again, if her eyes would ever shine again, without the addition of tears to help them do so.
1
Tuesday, 15 March 2016
Tuesday afternoon started quietly; the tea shop, small and welcoming with its country style interior, was now a second home to her. She had really got the hang of getting the orders right, and making sure the customers were happy.
Susan Hampson, the tea room owner, seemed satisfied with her work, and she got on well with the other girls who, like her, worked three or four days a week.
Jenny Carbrook bent to wipe the wooden surface of the table, before replacing the yellow gingham tablecloth with another one; this one not stained with jam. Little Isaac might have looked an angel, with his cute blue eyes and blonde hair, but he could certainly demolish a jammy doughnut with some speed and some mess. She leaned over to straighten the edge furthest from her and felt someone squeeze by her to get to the next table.
She lifted her head and stared into the warmest pair of deep brown eyes she had ever seen. He looked at her and smiled, and then she felt a second person slide past her.
‘This is a tight squeeze,’ the woman said, and frowned at the man.
‘We needed to be in a corner out of the way, Tara,’ he explained.
She nodded, without saying anything further.
Jenny finished replacing the sugar holder on the newly cleaned table and turned to the two customers.
‘I’ll give you chance to look at the menu,’ she said. ‘I’ll be back in five minutes. Would you be better on this table?’ She indicated the on
e she had just cleared.
‘No, we’re okay,’ the man said, flashing a quick smile at her. ‘I need to use my laptop, so we’re fine tucked away in this corner.’
She watched as he placed his laptop on the table and opened it. He began to speak immediately to his companion, and she didn’t seem to be too pleased by what he was saying. Jenny waited a few minutes and went across to them.
‘What can I get you?’ she asked, with a smile.
‘Two cream teas, please. Is that okay with you, Tara?’
The woman touched her hand. Her face was rigid, and she was clearly unhappy. ‘Mine’s coffee, not tea. Black coffee, please.’
Jenny wrote it on her pad and left them. The woman seemed on edge; it had showed in her voice. They were discussing work, and the woman appeared to be arguing with the man; at one point, he twisted the laptop towards her and pointed to something on it.
Jenny loaded the tray with the food and drinks they had ordered, turning to carry them to the table. The woman slammed past her, the strap of her shoulder bag catching on the edge of the tray and sending it crashing to the floor.
Jenny jumped back, as she felt the hot coffee hit her leg, and stifled a small scream. She needed this job, and didn’t want to make waves.
She felt Susan by her side, almost at the same time as the man reached her.
‘I’m sorry, Susan. I’ll clear it up,’ Jenny said.
‘What a tart,’ Susan responded. ‘She might have been in a mood, but she knew you were there, with a tray full of hot liquids. Are you hurt?’
The man helped her to a chair and turned to Susan. ‘A cold, wet cloth? Her leg was splashed.’ Susan nodded and moved back behind the counter. She handed the cloth to him, and he gently lifted Jenny’s leg and pressed the coolness on to her flesh, now turning red.
He held it there, his eyes meeting hers. ‘Sebastian West,’ he said. ‘I don’t normally touch a lady’s leg, without introducing myself first.’
‘Jenny Carbrook,’ she said. ‘And thank you.’
Susan came around with a mop and bucket, and began to pick everything up. Within five minutes, it was all cleared away, and Susan and Sebastian inspected the red mark on Jenny’s left leg.
‘You’ll live,’ he pronounced.
‘Well, thank goodness for that.’ Jenny grinned, feigning dramatics.
‘Cup of tea, Jenny?’ Susan asked. ‘You look as though you need it.’
‘Please,’ Sebastian said. ‘Join me. Is it okay if she has a small break, a sit down for twenty minutes, or so? I feel a bit responsible. My colleague was mad at me, not Jenny, but Jenny paid the price. By the way, just in case you need to take this further, and for your accident book, her name is Tara Lyons.’
Susan smiled, relieved it hadn’t been any worse. ‘Of course. Kirsty and I can cover her tables for a bit.’ She glanced at the clock. ‘In fact, after you’ve had a drink, go home. If it blisters, go to the Accident and Emergency. If not, I’ll see you Thursday.’
‘Wait here,’ he said, and moved towards the table in the corner to gather up his belongings. Jenny could see Susan replacing his order, although only for one this time, and adding a cup of tea for her.
Sebastian returned, stashing everything on to one of the spare chairs.
‘Have you ordered?’
‘Just a cup of tea, thanks.’ She smiled. It felt strange to be talking to a man; it felt strange to be talking to anyone, really.
Since her tumultuous, enforced break up with Mark just before Christmas, she had kept herself to herself; it almost felt as if sitting here with this man, this stranger, was the first civilised thing she had done in three months.
Twenty minutes later, she thanked him and stood to leave.
‘You have transport?’ he asked, and she nodded.
‘Yes. My little Fiesta is the one parked across the road. The rusty black one.’
He laughed. ‘We’ve all had a rusty car at some point in our lives, you know. Things will improve. I was going to offer to run you home, but if you’re sure …’
‘I’m fine,’ she said. She turned to Susan. ‘Thank you, Susan. Are you sure you can manage without me?’
‘Yes, we’re not that far off closing. Go on home, Jenny, and I’ll see you Thursday morning. If there’s any problem with that leg, get it checked out.’
Despite the leg pain, she smiled as she climbed into her car. Her personal paramedic had certainly been worth looking at, and even possibly worth the discomfort of a burn.
2
Wednesday, 1 June 2016
Michael knelt by the graveside and tenderly placed the spray of roses on it, before removing the dead ones and taking them across to the waste cage. He returned with a container of fresh water.
It was hard limiting himself to one visit a week; he wanted to be by her side every day, but knew what Anna would have said to that idea. Absolutely no way, Michael Groves. You get on with your life.
He put the pink roses in the metal container and inserted it into the holder. She had been gone for six months, and nothing seemed to be getting any easier. He sat on the grass and rested his hand on the headstone. Although her wish had been for cremation, he had buried her ashes instead of scattering them; it was now in his own will that the same would happen at his own death. They would finally be together.
‘I miss you,’ he said quietly. ‘All those years without you, and now, I’ve lost you again. It’s so wrong, my love.’
Michael remained sitting for a few moments. Standing, he stretched his muscles, took in the surrounding area, feeling the warmth of the sun before drying his tears. He walked to his car and sat in it without moving for a while. He really didn’t want to leave her, but sitting on the grass was something for a younger man to do, not a sixty-four-year-old.
Eventually, he put the car into drive and headed for Lindum Lodge. Mark had invited him for a meal, and he took every opportunity to be with his newly discovered son and grandchildren.
The children ran out to greet him, and he hugged them close to him. Mark followed them out and held out his hand.
‘Dad. Good to see you.’
‘And you, Mark. Everything okay?’
Mark nodded. ‘Come in. We’ll chat later.’
‘You mean when we’re in bed,’ Adam grinned.
‘They never talk about anything important when we’re there,’ Grace said, pouting her lips.
Mark and Michael laughed.
‘Inside, cheeky monkeys. Go and set the table, we’ll eat in about half an hour. You staying over, Dad?’
‘Er …’
‘There’s a match on. Thought we could watch it together, have a beer …’
‘I’d be delighted,’ Michael confirmed. His relationship with Mark was suddenly stepping up a level, and it was taking him by surprise. Although they had all stayed at the apartment in Sheffield after a Sheffield Wednesday match, he had never stayed at Lindum Lodge, their Lincoln home, before.
The previous week, for the first time, Mark had called him Dad. He now always referred to the man who had brought him up as Ray, if he ever had the need to mention him.
The children had been calling him Granddad Michael for a while, and he loved the relationship he was building with them. It seemed they had only ever met up with Ray Carbrook, the man they had been told was Granddad, about a half a dozen times, and the letters written by their mother confirmed the reason why.
The letters had also confirmed why Jenny had killed three people to get him out of their lives. Michael hoped the children would never have to find out what she had done.
Mark had made Shepherd’s pie, and they cleared their plates of every morsel.
‘Apple pie and custard?’ Mark queried and received a chorus of yeses.
It was delicious, but Mark confessed his culinary skills didn’t extend to baking; he had bought it at a local bakery. They were just finishing it off, when Grace spoke.
‘I saw Mummy today.’
Mark and Michae
l exchanged a glance.
‘Where?’ Mark asked.
‘Outside school. She looked different. Her hair is brown now, and cut very short.’
‘Are you absolutely sure it was her, sweetheart? I told you she doesn’t live in this country anymore.’
‘Pretty sure. She didn’t wave or anything, just looked at me,’
‘Adam?’
‘Don’t ask me. This is the first I’ve heard about it.’
‘Okay. It probably wasn’t your mother. She’s long gone, thank goodness. Just keep your eyes open, and let me know if you think you see her again.’
The children nodded. Neither appeared unduly worried by the potential re-appearance of Jenny Carbrook.
‘Okay,’ Mark said. ‘Is all homework done?’
Adam nodded, and Grace confirmed she just had twenty pages of reading to do, and was going up to her bedroom to read right now, if she didn’t have to load the dishwasher.
Adam groaned. ‘So, I have to load it on my own, I suppose. I should start and save homework for after our meal.’
‘I’ll do it,’ their father laughed. ‘Go on, have a night off.’
Both children disappeared at speed.
‘Good kids,’ Michael remarked. ‘Very good kids.’