VANISH WITHOUT TRACE an absolutely addictive crime thriller with a huge twist (Detective Mike Nash Thriller Book 2)
Page 24
Monique laughed. ‘Who do you think’s holding your other hand? See for yourself. She’s at the other side of the bed.’
Nash’s memory returned slowly. He didn’t move his head but stared at Monique. His face contorted with grief, ‘Viv,’ he said, in a whisper so quiet they nearly missed it.
Nash’s third visitor laughed. ‘I’m here too. I’m just not holding your hand.’
Nash turned his head slightly. He smiled as he saw Pearce standing at the foot of the bed.
‘I’ve got a hard head. And Charleston’s arm wasn’t quite strong enough.’
Nash’s smile became mischievous. ‘I remember; you wouldn’t kiss me. Now you won’t hold my hand. I don’t think you care.’
‘Right, that’ll have to do, I’m afraid.’ They looked round. The staff nurse pointed firmly to the door. ‘Five minutes is all you’re allowed.’
‘We’ll be back tomorrow, Mike,’ Monique promised.
Nash smiled his thanks then turned his head for the first time and looked at Clara. She squeezed his hand encouragingly. ‘Bye for now, Mike.’
For several days after their first visit Nash was lucid and seemed well on the road to recovery. On the Wednesday of the following week Monique went to visit Nash alone. It was the day the inquests into Charleston’s victims opened and Mironova and Pearce were required in court. When the Coroner had adjourned, Clara switched her mobile on. She listened to the voice mail message. ‘Monique wants to speak to me,’ she told Pearce. ‘She sounds upset.’ She dialled Monique’s number. Pearce couldn’t make out what Monique was saying, but the agitated tone of her voice was enough to start alarm bells ringing. ‘Right, we’ll be straight over,’ Clara told her.
‘What is it? What’s wrong?’ Pearce demanded.
‘When Monique went to the hospital, they wouldn’t let her see Mike. They told her there’s infection in the wound and he’s developed a high fever and pneumonia. Viv, she thinks he’s dying. She said even the doctors don’t hold out much hope.’
*
It was a long battle. Clara lost count of the nights she spent in the armchair alongside Nash’s bed. For over two weeks she wasn’t sure whether he was even aware of her presence. When Nash was well enough to sit up and talk, she sat on the edge of his bed and held his hand.
‘This is devotion above and beyond the call of duty,’ he told her weakly. It was a poor attempt to tease her, but it was the first sign of Nash’s sense of humour returning.
‘You saved my life,’ she answered defiantly. ‘It’s the least I can do to try and help you recover. But I want to ask you something.’
He looked at her questioningly. ‘When you found us in that quarry,’ Clara paused. She was watching him carefully and saw his expression take on a guarded look. ‘I know you may not want to be reminded of it, but do you remember seeing me before Charleston shot you?’
Nash pictured Clara lying on the bed, her glorious blonde hair tumbling about her shoulders, the honeyed sheen of her skin, her rose-tipped nipples topping her proud breasts, her long straight legs. He looked her straight in the eyes. ‘I walked into the building. There was a kitchen. I walked across the room. I started to open the door. There was a sound behind me. I turned round and he shot me.’
Clara’s worried frown disappeared. She smiled at him. ‘Little Jimmy, the burglar man, put a duvet over me before anyone else arrived. Peterson undressed me after he drugged me, you see. We think he was about to rape me when you arrived.’ She squeezed his hand. ‘So you see, Mike, I owe you more than just my life. In the circumstances, it would have seemed extremely churlish to be upset if you’d seen me without any clothes on, but I’m glad it didn’t happen.’
Nash smiled at her. ‘Spoilsport.’ He was pleased she was so relieved. He wondered if she’d ever realize, he hadn’t actually answered her question.
Shortly before he was released from hospital Nash received a visit from the head of the medical team. ‘I’m glad to see you appear to be mending well, but I have a few questions. It must seem strange for you to be on the receiving end for once.’ He tried a reassuring smile. ‘I need to ask about the medication you’ve been taking. I got the information from your GP. I rang him and he filled me in with the reason the tablets were prescribed for you. It so happens I’ve a bit of experience of this drug. I wondered if you’d help me with a study I’ve been doing.’
Nash nodded his agreement.
‘Do you ever have any side effects: suffer from hallucinations or hot sweats? Either when you’re awake or asleep? You might regard them as nightmares or severe bad dreams. They’d leave you feeling drained the next day.’
‘I’ve had some vivid nightmares. I also visualize crimes being committed. But then I’ve always done that.’
‘I’m not talking about those incidents. I imagine most good detectives do it. The nightmares are a different matter. Tell me, do you ever take the tablets when you’ve had a drink?’
‘Occasionally I do,’ Nash admitted.
‘And would you say your nightmares are worse on those occasions?’
Nash looked bewildered. ‘Are you saying that’s what’s caused my nightmares over the past couple of years? Those tablets?’
‘Not necessarily the tablets on their own, although in severe cases they might work alone. Obviously, you take more of them when your stress level is highest. But when they’re combined with alcohol it drastically increases the chances of the side effects. I’m not saying do without them if you really need them. Any more than I’m suggesting you sign the pledge. Just don’t take the two together.’
Tom Pratt came to see him several times. On his last visit Pratt talked about the case for the first time. Charleston, he told Mike, had been dead before the car caught fire. The impact had driven the steering column through his body, puncturing several organs. At Mexican Pete’s insistence a urine sample had been taken from Clara. ‘Apparently the date rape drug he used was gamma hydroxy butyrate, do you know it?’
Nash nodded. ‘GBH,’ he said softly.
‘Forensics found a stock of it in that bloody dolls house. The professor’s report made very interesting reading. He reckons the embalming work is the finest he’s ever seen. Apparently, Charleston kept them sedated with a normal sedative until he was ready to rape them, then fed them with GBH repeatedly. But that had its inevitable result of convulsions, fits, coma, and ultimately death.
‘We put Charleston’s details on to the computer and sent them worldwide. We got a report back from the FBI. His fingerprints match those of a mortician working in Forest Lawns Funeral Parlor in Seattle during the early eighties, a man they knew as Peter Charles. He was wanted in connection with the deaths of three girls who’d gone missing in the Seattle area. Those girls were also blue-eyed blondes. Their bodies were found after Charles vanished. They’d all been embalmed.’
When Nash was well enough to leave hospital Clara picked him up. She drove to his new Rutland Way flat. ‘Why are we here? I haven’t moved in yet.’
‘Oh yes you have. We decided you’d be better here, without steps to climb while you’re still fragile. David was home on leave and everyone pitched in. Your key, sir.’ She passed him a set of door keys. ‘Do you need a hand?’ Nash insisted he could cope on his own. Clara smiled secretively. ‘In that case I’ll leave you to it.’
Nash was far from fully recovered, but he was glad to be out of hospital. He unlocked the door. The flat must have been closed up for some time. He expected that musty smell associated with a building starved of fresh air. Instead he was greeted with a wonderfully fresh mixture of aromas, a combination of fresh flowers and furniture polish. The flat was sparkling as if an army of charwomen had just marched through. All his furniture arranged more or less as he would have set it himself. There were flowers everywhere he looked. Almost every available surface had some adorning it. He was still peering around in surprise, when a voice behind him said, ‘If any more flowers arrive, I’ll have to buy more vases.’
> Monique stood in the hall entrance, a carrier bag in either hand. ‘What have you got there?’ Nash asked.
‘Food,’ she told him. ‘I’ve been appointed to ensure you get a good healthy diet.’
‘Who by and what’s all—?’
‘By the people who sent these flowers. They’re from parents, mainly. Parents who are at last able to mourn their daughters and to bury them with dignity. Also the parents of the girls who were on Charleston’s shopping list. They know what a narrow escape they had. They know their daughters are alive, thanks to you.’
She made dinner for them, which they ate in companionable silence for the most part. Towards the end of the meal, he remembered Monique’s fear of the dark. ‘How are you going to get home? I’d forgotten you don’t go out at night.’
She smiled. ‘We’ll sort something out.’
The ‘something’, she explained, as she was doing the washing up, involved her staying at the flat. ‘I made up the bed in your spare room,’ she told him. ‘I hope you don’t mind. You need someone to look after you until you’re strong enough to fend for yourself, and in any case I don’t like that house anymore.’
It was a week later when things changed. They’d eaten another of Monique’s superb dinners, washed down with a bottle of red wine. Nash walked with Monique as she went to the spare room. Outside the door he took her hand and kissed it. ‘That’s to say thank you for looking after me.’
The touch was like a tiny electric pulse between them. She turned to face him and they kissed. The spare bed remained unused. Theirs was a fierce mutual hunger that would not be easily satisfied.
Two days later Monique sat opposite him over breakfast. ‘Mike,’ she began a little hesitantly, ‘I’ve made a decision.’
‘About us, do you mean?’
‘Partly; I’m going to live in France. I can’t stay here any longer. Helmsdale has too many unhappy memories. My one regret is leaving you.’ Her mouth twisted with pain. ‘That was tearing me apart. But something made me realize it was better for me to leave.’
‘What was it?’
‘You made love to me last night, and it was wonderful. But you called me Danny. You didn’t even realize you’d done it.’
Nash wanted to protest.
‘No, Mike, my mind’s made up. I’m leaving as soon as I can make the arrangements. Maybe it could be different sometime. But there are too many ghosts here. For both of us.’
About eight months later, as Daniel Michael Canvey was being born, Nash’s phone in Helmsdale CID rang. Apart from a spate of shoplifting and a minor act of vandalism there was nothing criminal going on.
Nash eyed the phone for a moment before picking up. Something told him his peace was about to be shattered.
‘Mike, Tom Pratt here. How busy are you?’
‘Not rushed off my feet, Tom, even the Westlea’s quiet at the minute, although I reckon that won’t last.’
‘Actually it’s to do with the Westlea that I was ringing. Can you come over to Netherdale tomorrow morning? Something’s come up that we need to deal with.’
Nash didn’t regret answering the phone at the time. That came later.
THE END
The D.I. Mike Nash Series
Book 1: WHAT LIES BENEATH
Book 2: VANISH WITHOUT TRACE
Book 3: PLAYING WITH FIRE
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glossary of English slang for US readers
A & E: Accident and emergency department in a hospital
Aggro: Violent behaviour, aggression
Air raid: an attack in which bombs are dropped from aircraft on ground targets
Allotment: a plot of land rented by an individual for growing fruit, vegetable or flowers
Anorak: nerd (it also means a waterproof jacket)
Artex: textured plaster finish for walls and ceilings
A Level: exams taken between 16 and 18
Auld Reekie: Edinburgh
Au pair: live-in childcare helper. Often a young woman.
Barm: bread roll
Barney: argument
Beaker: glass or cup for holding liquids
Beemer: BMW car or motorcycle
Benefits: social security
Bent: corrupt
Bin: wastebasket (noun), or throw in rubbish (verb)
Biscuit: cookie
Blackpool Lights: gaudy illuminations in seaside town
Bloke: guy
Blow: cocaine
Blower: telephone
Blues and twos: emergency vehicles
Bob: money
Bobby: policeman
Broadsheet: quality newspaper (New York Times would be a US example)
Brown bread: rhyming slang for dead
Bun: small cake
Bunk: do a bunk means escape
Burger bar: hamburger fast-food restaurant
Buy-to-let: Buying a house/apartment to rent it out for profit
Charity Shop: thrift store
Carrier bag: plastic bag from supermarket
Care Home: an institution where old people are cared for
Car park: parking lot