Read Angels Bleed (Fallen Angels Book 1) Online
Authors: Max Hardy
Jessica leaned forward to take in the image on the table. Her eyes darted from that to the picture of Rebecca below. ‘It looks like Rebecca Angus.’ she answered, the words croaky as her throat dried out. She took a sip of water from the glass, her hand shaking as she did so.
‘Would you like to take a moment Mrs Seymour?’ Strange asked.
‘Sorry. No. I’m alright. This is all just a bit of a shock, to be honest.’ she answered.
Strange nodded. ‘I can appreciate that.’ he said, as he laid a second photograph on the table over the picture of the limousine. ‘This is another picture at the same lights, showing a clearer image of the limousine driver. Could you tell me if that is your regular driver, Mr Ewan Jones please?’ Strange asked, folding his hands on the table over his file.
Jessica took in the slightly blurry features of a man wearing a chauffeur’s cap, dark hair evident just below the brim line. In an instant her expression turned from inquisitive, as she looked over the features, to incredulous, as the blurred elements started to coalesce in front of her eyes into someone she did recognise. She looked at Strange in utter astonishment, her mouth agape as she sought words to answer his question.
‘Mrs Seymour, is that Ewan Jones?’
She shook her head slowly, the sideways motion stuttering as her body shook, her lips trembling and the words timorous as she said. ‘No, it’s not Ewan.’
‘But you do recognise the driver?’ Strange prompted, firmly.
‘I do.’ she barely whispered, disbelief screaming from the near silence. ‘It’s John. It looks like John.’
1:35 pm
‘Now that’s what I call retail therapy.’ Allie said, sinking backwards into her seat in the restaurant, dropping the dozen or so designer label bags she was carrying to the floor around her. They had left the coffee shop earlier a couple of minutes after Sarah had dropped the bombshell about John having an affair. Allie had seen the distress it was causing her friend and ordered Sarah out on the shopping trip to distract her mind.
Sarah sat down opposite, placing her three bags on the empty seat next to her. She smiled at Allie. ‘It was fun finding clothes to best accentuate your new assets, I have to admit.’
Allie faked shock, clutching a hand to her new chest. ‘I’m offended. It wasn’t just about me. We did go into one shop for you too.’
‘For Jacob, I think you will find.’ she corrected, opening her handbag on the table and taking out her phone. The modicum of joviality that had managed to work its way into her mood suddenly left as she took in the notifications on the front of the phone. She looked up at Allie, all of her previous tribulations tattooed in her expression. ‘Ten missed calls from John. Five text messages from John.’ she stated with a heavy sigh.
‘Well, he can just wait. If he couldn’t be bothered to haul his scrawny ass away from work to celebrate your anniversary, he can damn well wait until after lunch before you call him. Be strong Baby Girl.’ Allie ordered, leaning over the table as her eye was caught by something in Sarah’s handbag. She pulled the small piece of cloth out and shot Sarah a surprised look. ‘Tell me this isn’t what I think it is?’ she asked, holding the cloth up in front of her.
Sarah leaned over and grabbed it off her petulantly, another one of her false nails flying off as it caught in one of the tags on the taggie.
‘It’s Jacob’s taggie, that’s all. It’s just nice to have it close when he’s not around. There’s nothing wrong with that.’ she defensively answered, hiding her hands and the cloth under the table.
‘That’s the same taggie you had during the thing we don’t talk about, isn’t it.’ Allie challenged, all joviality gone from her tone.
Sarah’s demeanour was resolute for a few seconds, fronting up to her friend, but under Allie’s stern consternation, she cracked, lifting the taggie onto the table. ‘Yes, it’s the same taggie. It is Jacob’s now.’ she answered contritely, twirling the piece of cloth through her fingers, slipping the tags over a few of them.
‘I didn’t realise you still had it. I certainly didn’t know you had given it to Jacob. Why the fuck have you done that, after everything you went through. It can only bring back bad memories, surely.’ Allie chastised.
Sarah didn’t look up from watching her hands playing with the taggie as she spoke quietly. ‘It’s not this tatty bit of cloth that brings back bad memories. It’s watching Jacob every day. It’s the realisation that every decision I made back then almost certainly caused Jacob to be the way he is. This is my comfort. My link to keep some sense of the nonsense that happened. It’s a way of letting Jacob know that for the briefest of times he had a sister. It’s my way of keeping the promise of them alive, in the touch of something they both held.’
Allie sighed heavily, shaking her head. ‘You cannot possibly know that Baby Girl. No one knows why Jacob is the way he is. No one.’ she stated.
‘It’s not a case of knowing, it is how I feel. Every day it’s how I feel.’ Sarah retorted.
‘Have you ever told John about this?’ asked Allie, concerned.
‘About how I feel, or about what happened?’ Sarah queried.
‘Both.’
‘He knows a little bit about the thing we don’t talk about. He doesn’t know about the pregnancy. There’s only you, me and my parents that know about that now. As to the aching guilt I feel every second of the day, knowing that I caused Jacob’s condition, no, he doesn’t know about that.’ Sarah answered, twirling the taggie over and over.
‘Don’t you think it is something you should talk about? If he is hurting and you are hurting and neither of you are talking, is it any surprise you are drifting apart.’ Allie stated.
‘Good afternoon ladies, could I get you anything to drink while you are looking at the menu.’ asked a waiter arriving on their blindside at the table.
Automatically Allie said. ‘Could I have a bottle of your 66 Chateau Lafaurie and two Caesar Salads as well thank you.’ she finished abruptly, flashing him an emotionless smile.
‘I think it is way beyond talking. He is having an affair Allie, have you forgotten that!’ Sarah retorted angrily in a whisper as the waiter left.
Allie paused for a moment, taking in her friend’s troubled countenance. ‘The first time I saw that taggie was when your parents thought you had been abducted. It was just after they had arranged the appointment for your abortion. You went missing,
he
was away and they put two and two together, coming up with five and thought
he
had snatched you. I knew
he
hadn’t and I knew where you would be. I found you at the bottom of old Professor Langley’s orchard, half a mile down the country lane from your parent’s farm. You were sitting under our tree, the daddy of the orchard, right in the middle. The place you always went when you were scared, ever since we met, when you were five and three quarters and I was six. Not that we weren’t kids on that evening. God, it’s scary to think you were only thirteen.’
‘Allie, we don’t talk about it, that’s the whole point of calling it the thing we don’t talk about!’ Sarah chastised, a little fire in her eyes.
‘In this case I think we need to. I found you, taggie in your hand, sitting there with the evening dew settling on your coat, mingling with the tirade of tears you were shedding. Your Bros holdall was leaning on the tree next to you. I seem to recall you had packed only one pair of clean knickers and the rest of the bag was filled with makeup.’ Allie smiled at Sarah as she relayed the memories.
‘I know you didn’t agree with what they did at the time. I know that’s why you ran away. I know you hated them for it for a very long time afterwards. But you do know that they only ever had your best interests at heart. They did what they did because they loved you, not because they hated you, or hated him. We spent a long time talking about that into the early hours of the morning. Perhaps it’s the same with John. Have you considered that what he really wants, when he is talking about euthanasia, is to have a plan in place should things take a turn for the worse with Jacob. Just think about the tough decisions your parents had to make on your behalf. I’m not saying it is right, I’m just asking you to think about it.’ Allie finished, somehow managing to convey concern on an immovable face, in spite of the Botox.
The fire left Sarah’s eyes and she looked back down at the taggie. ‘I remember. I know what you are saying. Some days I think they were right. Most days I think they were wrong. But I don’t blame them anymore. I put myself into that situation. I was a minor and they had to look after me. It was all because of the choices I made, the forbidden fruit that I partook of. I know I need to understand where he is coming from. I never gave him the chance to explain, I just flipped.’
‘Not out of character then!’ teased Allie, before continuing. ‘Do you remember one of the other things we talked about that night, about his wife?’
‘I remember. I remember I blamed her for not understanding her husband and for not giving him the things that a wife should. I blamed her for pushing him away from their marriage, into the arms of someone else; into my arms. None of it was my doing, none of it was his doing; it was all her fault.’ she recollected.
‘You are in her shoes now. Do you think you understand John? Do you think you give him the things a wife should? Do you think you are pushing him away from your marriage? Are you pushing him into the arms of someone else?’ Allie challenged, opening and pouring the wine that arrived at the table, pushing a full glass over towards Sarah as she took a huge gulp out of her own.
‘I was very young and very naïve. I knew nothing about relationships. I know it didn’t stop me thinking I knew everything and putting everyone through hell. It’s different now. John and I made a vow, shortly after we met, that if either of us didn’t want to be with the other, we would say so. If we met someone else we wanted to be with more, we would say so. What we wouldn’t do was lie or deceive each other. That was our scripture, our simple honesty, and he has abused it.’
‘Well, Baby Girl, it’s a very romantic thought, but you are still naïve if you think that was ever going to happen. You have secrets. He has secrets. Neither of you ever had a relationship where you could be totally honest with each other, so how the hell do you think you were going to keep that little promise. Don’t get me wrong, I love you both to bits and I am certainly not condoning what John has done. I am one hundred and ten percent behind you. I’m just asking you to be honest with yourself before you talk to him. Ask yourself the question. Have I given him any cause to stray? For pity’s sake, you made a pass at Rob last night, so bear that in mind too!’
Sarah cringed and lowered her head into the taggie as Allie said the last sentence. ‘Oh god, did you have to remind me of that. It was so embarrassing.’
‘Yes I do. You are having a mare about John having an affair and there you are playing tonsil hockey with someone else. It is all down to the two of you not talking. It is all down to the two of you not being honest and open about how you feel. If you really believed that shite trite promise you made, you would take the pain of realisation and split the fuck up without any blame, any animosity or any repercussions. Just accept bad shit has happened and that together, the two of you are toxic.’ Allie extolled, floridly.
‘Christ Allie, tell me what you really think, why don’t you.’ Sarah answered in surprise.
‘Well, it’s just fucking relationships, it’s not like it’s anything important, like Botox.’ Allie retorted, a wily grin on her face. ‘Consider that a verbal slap.’
‘Ouch.’ Sarah joked, contorting her face in contrived pain.
‘I love you to bits Baby Girl and trust me I do know how hard it is for you, but you don’t help yourself, letting the baggage of yesterday…’ she began, reaching over and shaking the taggie in Sarah’s hands. ‘Cast it’s shadows on the life you have today. Never forget her. Never ever forget her. But that’s not why Jacob is the way he is and that certainly isn’t why you and John have problems.’ she finished, grabbing one of Sarah’s hands and squeezing it hard.
Sarah’s eyed began to well up, with tears of relief, her face relaxing as she looked at her best friend. ‘Thank you, for listening. You always know how to help me get over myself. You always seem to have the answers.’
‘I don’t have any answers, just perhaps the right questions. It really does help that I don’t give a shit.’ she winked.
‘Yes you do, behind that plastic chest of yours, there is a heart of gold.’
‘No there’s not, it’s plastic too, and full of collagen. I had that done two weeks ago. You should call John. Get yourself home and talk. After lunch though. He’s still a bastard for hurting my Baby Girl, so let him sweat for a little while longer. Now, where’s that Caesar Salad. Waiter!’