One good deed, p.1

One Good Deed, page 1

 

One Good Deed
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One Good Deed


  PRAISE FOR DAVID JACKSON

  ‘Horrific, hilarious and often rather moving’

  THE TIMES

  ‘Hitchcockian suspense’

  FINANCIAL TIMES

  ‘David Jackson is officially the King of One More Chapter’

  JOANNA CANNON, AUTHOR OF THE TROUBLE WITH GOATS AND SHEEP

  ‘A SERIOUSLY creepy thriller’

  MARK BILLINGHAM, AUTHOR OF IN THE DARK

  ‘Full of surprises from start to finish. A gasp-out-loud read’

  JANICE HALLETT, AUTHOR OF THE APPEAL

  ‘The master of razor-sharp one-liners’

  MANDASUE HELLER, AUTHOR OF THE GAME

  ‘So chillingly addictive you’ll forget to breathe … Cold and clever, yet brimming with heart, humour and ingenious twists’

  CHRIS WHITAKER, AUTHOR OF WE BEGIN AT THE END

  ‘Superb. Creepy, pacy, and oh so witty’

  CAZ FREAR, AUTHOR OF SWEET LITTLE LIES

  ‘Disturbing, blackly funny and completely compulsive, David Jackson wrings every bit of possible tension from his deliciously chilling premise’

  ALEX NORTH, AUTHOR OF THE WHISPER MAN

  ‘Jackson doesn’t do cosy thrillers. You’ve been warned’

  PAUL FINCH, AUTHOR OF STRANGERS

  ‘Absolutely gripping’

  DAVID MARK, AUTHOR OF DARK WINTER

  ‘An intense and compelling read that will evoke complicated emotions in every reader. Highly recommended’

  LISA HALL, AUTHOR OF BETWEEN ME AND YOU

  ‘Excellent as always. Grimy and heartbreaking in equal measure, peppered with Jackson’s trademark wit and humour’

  WILL CARVER, AUTHOR OF GIRL 4

  ‘Utterly compelling and impossible to put down. A terrifying glimpse into a fractured mind. Incredible’

  LUCA VESTE, AUTHOR OF DEAD GONE

  ‘Dark and disturbing yet so absorbing. Jackson knows how to reel you in with emotion and yet shock you with the darkness. Creepy as hell’

  MEL SHERRATT, AUTHOR OF HUSH HUSH

  ‘Brilliant. Spiralling tension, wit and heart, this is British crime writing at its best’

  MARK EDWARDS, AUTHOR OF HERE TO STAY

  ‘David Jackson is master of the unputdownable thriller’

  MICHAEL WOOD, AUTHOR OF STOLEN CHILDREN

  ONE GOOD DEED

  Also by David Jackson and available from Viper

  The Resident

  The Rule

  No Secrets

  ONE GOOD DEED

  DAVID JACKSON

  For Eden

  1

  This was the third house he had tried today, and his hopes were not high. He expected that this one would lead to just as much disappointment as all the others he had visited in the past week.

  The problem was that he didn’t have much to go on.

  He knew that Rebecca’s surname was Covington, and that was his biggest clue to help him find Rebecca’s nan. But what if the nan was on her mother’s side? In that case, her name wouldn’t be Covington and he was wasting his time.

  And then there was the area. He didn’t even know if he was in the right part of the country.

  He knew very little about Rebecca’s family. She had once shown him a photo of her parents, but he’d never met them. Which was a pity. He was hoping one day to do things the traditional way and request permission to marry their daughter.

  That could still happen, though, once he got her back.

  The recollection of the phone call had come to him after weeks of agonising. Popped into his head as if to say, This what you’re looking for?

  He remembered the growing panic on Rebecca’s face as she took the call. Remembered her repeating the details she was hearing. In particular, the words ‘Wetherley Hospital’.

  She had told him afterwards that her nan had fallen over on one of her country walks and had been rushed into hospital, and that she had to go and see her immediately. He had offered to drive Rebecca there, but she had refused.

  Later, when it seemed that her nan was recovering nicely, the incident was forgotten.

  Until now.

  And that’s what had brought him to the area around Wetherley, searching for an elderly lady who may or may not be called Mrs Covington. It felt like clutching at straws, but it was all he had.

  Rebecca was everything.

  He was standing in front of a low rusted gate, staring up the path at a small detached cottage. A cute place, but in need of some attention. He could easily picture an old woman living alone here, and that gave him hope.

  The gate squealed as he pushed it open. He stepped along the path to the front door, noting the overgrown ivy, the grimy gnomes, the bird feeders filled with sludge.

  Unable to find a doorbell, he rapped on the door and waited.

  Nothing at first. Then, as he went to knock again, he heard movement within. A shape appeared through the leaded glass. The door was opened.

  She was small and bent, her head tilted to the side to train one dark, beady eye on him, the other eye milky-white. She wore a thick cardigan and a tartan wool skirt. Below, her bare pale legs were marbled with blue veins.

  ‘Hello,’ he said cheerily. ‘Mrs Covington?’

  ‘Yes?’

  ‘My name’s Darren Stringer. I … I don’t suppose that rings any bells with you?’

  ‘No. Should it?’

  His heart sank. Probably another address to cross off his list.

  ‘I’m looking for Rebecca Covington. Is she your granddaughter?’

  ‘Rebecca? What do you want with Rebecca?’

  The question took him aback. This was the first time he’d got a positive response.

  Let’s not be too hasty …

  He took out his phone, showed her the photo of Rebecca on his lock screen. ‘Is this her?’

  The woman took the device from him and brought it close to her good eye.

  ‘Yes,’ she said. ‘That’s my Rebecca. How do you know her?’

  He tried to hide his excitement as he took back the phone. ‘I’m her boyfriend. She’s never mentioned me?’

  ‘No. No, she hasn’t. What’s your name again?’

  ‘Darren Stringer.’

  ‘No, I’m sorry. She’s never mentioned you. What can I do for you?’

  There was no softening in her manner. Darren was beginning to fear this would be no easy task.

  ‘I’m looking for her. She’s gone missing.’

  ‘Missing? What do you mean, missing?’

  ‘I mean I can’t find her. She’s not at her house.’

  ‘Which house?’

  ‘The one on Arnold Lane. In Fowerby. She’s—’

  ‘She doesn’t live there anymore. She’s moved out.’

  ‘Well, yes. That’s what I meant. She’s gone but I don’t know where she is, and I was hoping you could—’

  ‘You say you’re her boyfriend?’

  ‘Yes. We’ve been seeing each other for months.’

  ‘And she left without saying a word?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Ever thought there might be a good reason for that?’

  He stared at her. A good reason? What was she implying? What good reason could there possibly be for the love of his life simply to disappear, to leave behind everything they had together?

  ‘I don’t think there is. She loves me, and I love her. I’m hoping we can get married one day. To be honest—’

  The old woman made a noise. Almost a snort of derision. He suddenly hated her.

  ‘What?’ he said.

  She sighed heavily. ‘I’m sorry to disappoint you, dear, but there’s only one reason a woman leaves a man without a word of explanation, and that’s because she wants to start a new life. Without him in it.’

  Darren shook his head. ‘No. You’re wrong. I think something must have happened to her. Something awful. She probably needs my help.’

  The woman pursed her dry, cracked lips. ‘Rebecca doesn’t need your help. She’s not in any danger. When I last spoke to her, she was—’

  ‘You spoke to her? When?’

  He realised how demanding he sounded when her roving pupil suddenly locked on to a spot between his own eyes.

  ‘I spoke to her just yesterday. She’s a lovely girl. Tells me everything. If there was something wrong, I would be the first to know.’

  He felt his irritation mounting.

  ‘She doesn’t tell you everything. She didn’t tell you about me, did she?’

  ‘No … well … Perhaps I should say that she tells me about everything that matters.’

  He was convinced he caught a touch of a smile. A hint of satisfaction. He had to force himself not to get mad at her. Tried telling himself it wasn’t unusual for old people to be spiteful. But it still hurt.

  ‘Look,’ he said, ‘I just need to speak to her, find out what’s going on. You understand that, don’t you?’

  ‘What I understand is that if Rebecca had wanted you to know her business, she would have told you. Goodbye.’

  She went to close the door, and Darren knew that, once she did, he would never get her to open it again. He couldn’t let that happen.

  Which is why he jammed his foot in the doorway.

  ‘What are you doing?’ the woman demanded, a note of alarm in her voice. He didn’t want to hurt her, not even to frighten her, but he needed to know, he had a right to know.

  ‘Just … just tell me where she is, okay? I need to talk to her, and she’s not answering her phone. If you could just give me—’

  She opened the door and then slammed it on his foot, and even though she looked light enough to pick up with one hand, the force of it sent a jolt of pain up his leg.

  ‘Stop that! I’m not here to cause any trouble. I just want—’

  She gave his foot another bash. He yelped and then shoved hard against the door, sending the woman reeling backwards into the wall behind her. He saw pain on her face as she rubbed at her hip, and he thought to himself, Got to be careful. Old people bruise easily. They have brittle bones.

  He opened his mouth to apologise, but she cut him off with a glare that could stop a clock and then went scurrying down the hallway.

  He followed her inside. It was a gloomy, eerie space, with dark wooden floorboards and wall panelling. It had no windows of its own, but relied on the light that trickled through a stained-glass window set high on the turn of the oak staircase.

  ‘Please,’ he said. ‘I’m asking for your help.’

  ‘Tell that to the police,’ she said. She picked up the phone from its cradle on a hall table.

  ‘No,’ he said. ‘Don’t do that.’

  He continued towards her, but she began to jab at the phone’s buttons with a skeletal digit, and he knew he couldn’t allow her to complete the call, so he snatched at the phone. But she refused to let go of it, her strength remarkably out of proportion to her frame. He heard a tinny voice coming from the receiver and realised she had got through to the emergency services, so he wrested the phone from her grasp. But even as he did so, she raked her fingernails down the back of his hand, causing him to gasp and drop the phone to the parquet floor. A panel flew off the back of the device and it spewed out its batteries, terminating the call.

  He brought his hand to his mouth and sucked at the bloody scratches, eyeing the old woman as she slowly backed away into the corner of the hallway. He hoped that she was spent now, that they could talk calmly and rationally, that it would become obvious to her how he loved her granddaughter, and that she would do the right thing in bringing the couple together again.

  ‘Get out of my house,’ she said.

  ‘I will. Tell me where Rebecca is and I’ll go right now.’

  ‘You’ll never find her. Never!’

  She surprised him then. Came towards him, clutching something she’d withdrawn from a cylindrical brass umbrella stand behind her. It was a wooden cane of the type a rambler might use, as twisted and gnarled as she was. She began waving it in front of her.

  ‘Get out of my fucking house!’

  The expletive shocked him as much as her attack. For some reason, old people swearing always unsettled him.

  He put his hands out. ‘This is getting ridiculous. I just want to talk. You don’t have to—’

  She closed on him then, shrieking as she raised the stick. She whipped it through the air with unexpected velocity, catching him on the wrist with a mighty crack, and he felt excruciating pain.

  ‘Get out!’ she demanded. She aimed the next blow at his head. He blocked it with his forearm, managed to grab hold of the stick.

  ‘Enough!’ he said. ‘You have to stop!’

  She tugged with all her might, her single usable eye burning into him as she formed angry noises in her throat. Darren held on, his mind racing for a way to end this absurd battle.

  And then a surge of anger overwhelmed him and he thrust the stick into the woman’s chest. She flew backwards, immense surprise on her features.

  One of her slippers snagged on the runner, and Darren realised what was happening as if it were in slow motion. He watched her topple, her feet going from under her almost comically, but then he saw where her head would land, and he found himself tensing, his stomach lurching as he wished for it not to happen, willed her to fall slightly to the left to avoid the inevitable collision.

  The old woman’s skull smacked against the edge of the telephone table with a bang that reverberated throughout the hall. She landed with a thud on the floor, a crumpled bag of bones, trembling and rattling, spittle bubbling onto her parched lips.

  He stepped towards her, feeling powerless and at the same time that this must be a dream, this couldn’t really be happening. An address – that’s all he’d wanted. Not this.

  He bent over the convulsing figure. ‘Mrs Covington? Are you all right?’ But he knew it was a stupid question. Nobody in that state could be all right.

  His suspicion was confirmed when she went still, twitched a couple more times, and issued a final sigh. The glint in her good eye faded, rendering it as sightless as its partner.

  ‘Mrs Covington?’ he whispered, but he knew the words went unheard. He put his fingers to her neck and wrist in search of the slightest quiver of life. He placed the back of his hand over her nose and mouth, praying for the merest wisp of expelled breath.

  But it was all in vain.

  She was most definitely dead.

  2

  Darren straightened up. Tried to get his numbed brain to work properly. How crazy was this?

  He didn’t know what to do. He’d come to ask a simple, straightforward question, that was all. Nobody was supposed to die, for Christ’s sake!

  He had to get out as quickly as possible. Nobody need ever know he was here.

  He started for the open front door.

  And then he paused.

  They’ll come, he thought. A neighbour. Maybe even Rebecca herself. Then they’ll call the police.

  But what if I tidied up? Wouldn’t they think she just fell and banged her head? She has a history of falls, after all. Why would they even suspect foul play?

  Slowly, Darren closed the front door and returned to the body.

  And then something else occurred to him.

  The phone call. She’d managed to get through to 999 just before she died. They would know that a call had been made from this address.

  Shit.

  It’ll be enough, he thought. They’ll get forensics in here. They’ll find my fingerprints. I don’t know what I’ve touched and what I haven’t. And they can do all kinds of clever stuff these days. They’ll find my DNA.

  Her nails!

  They’ll find my skin under her nails! And because Rebecca is her granddaughter, they’ll talk to her, and that will lead them to me, and they’ll find the marks on my hand, they’ll match my fingerprints and my DNA, and then I’m fucked, royally fucked.

  Shit!

  It seemed so unfair. All he wanted was to get Rebecca back.

  Okay, he told himself. Deep breaths. Think logically.

  First of all, I may have more time than I thought. Rebecca told me her nan doesn’t get many visitors. Also, I don’t have a police record. Even when they examine the scene, they won’t make an immediate connection to me. In fact, it’s possible they may never make a connection to me. Rebecca doesn’t know I’ve been here. She doesn’t have any reason to think I know the address. She might not say anything about me to the police – why would she? And when I find her and explain things to her, she’ll understand that it was all just a horrible accident and she’ll want to protect me.

  So, right now, the best thing to do is to buy myself a little more time.

  He began to search the house.

  Downstairs there was a living room, a dining room and a kitchen. The kitchen wasn’t spacious, but adjoining it was a utility room with a stainless-steel sink and the usual appliances.

  Including a small chest freezer.

  He lifted its lid. Plumes of white vapour billowed over the edges and curled down the sides as he peered into its depths. There was so little food inside it seemed pointless to keep it going twenty-four hours a day.

  But that was good news as far as Darren was concerned.

  He went back to the hallway and stared down at the crumpled figure. There was nothing to her. With a bit of judicious folding, she might just fit.

  Grimacing, he bent down and scooped the body into his arms. He was shocked at how insubstantial she seemed. It was like picking up a sleeping child.

  He carried her to the utility room. The freezer lid was still propped open, and already the room felt noticeably chillier.

  As reverentially as he could, he began to lower the old lady into her icy tomb, to rest atop her frozen peas.

  She didn’t fit.

  Even though she was now creased up like a concertina, her scrawny legs still protruded above the freezer’s edge.

 

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