Weirdo (36 page)

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Authors: Cathi Unsworth

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Fiction

BOOK: Weirdo
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The night in the graveyard kept coming back to Corrine.

Never look back, don’t ever look back.

She had broken the spell. Or worse. She had made it turn back on itself. Yes, that must be it, she thought as she swept. All the signs were there. Debbie being taken suddenly ill yesterday, that was the start of it. Then the book vanishing … Or being stolen … Taken from her bag …

Corrine lifted the dustpan and her eyes along with it. Nearly dropped the thing back on the floor as she looked through the window.

Sam was standing outside. She didn’t look her normal neatly ordered self – quite the opposite, in fact. Her face was smeared with dirt, her hair a tangled mess and there was a big graze across one of her knees, like she’d taken some kind of tumble. But the worst thing, the most shocking thing that Corrine couldn’t pull her eyes away from, was the smile of demented triumph on Sam’s face as she held up a big black book.

35
What Difference Does It Make?
March 2003

From where she sat on the sofa in her lounge, Sandra Gray saw the light finally go off in her husband’s shed at the bottom of the garden. All afternoon he had been in there, the place where he kept all his old police things, saying that he needed to dig something out for the private detective before he could tell her anything more.

Sandra had tried her best to distract herself with the TV, with preparing the meal that was now in the oven, with pretending that everything was as normal. But she hadn’t seen her husband in this way for nigh-on twenty years. Paul had fallen apart once before, because of this case. She didn’t know what she would do if he got that way again.

The porch light blinked on, illuminating his passage back up the garden path. Paul’s face looked stern and resolute. He was carrying a book in his hands.

* * *

“The Leisure Beach?” said Francesca.

“That’s right,” said Rivett. “Pull in just here, the guard’ll
wave you through.”

A frown crossed her face and she glanced down at the dashboard clock as she slowed the car down to make the turn. It was coming up to ten past seven. The panic that had gripped her earlier began to subside as her mind began to focus.

Those documents Ross was sending her must have come through the fax. Dad would probably have them in his hands right now, be speaking to Sean, telling him about the business links between Rivett and Smollet she’d asked her ex-husband to look into. Did they have something to do with the old funfair? What other possible reason could Rivett have for bringing her here?

There was a security booth by the entrance and sure enough, when the shaven-headed young man inside caught sight of Rivett, he smiled and pressed the switch that brought the barrier up, waving them through into the car park.

“Seem a bit strange to you, do it?” said Rivett. “Coming here?”

Francesca turned off the engine, keeping her expression deadpan while her mind shifted gears. Maybe the former DCI did not know quite so much about her as she assumed.

“Are you making fun of me, Mr Rivett?” she said, fixing him with a stern gaze. “If DCI Smollet really didn’t want to do an interview, he only had to say. There’s no need to go to this much effort to try and put me off.”

Rivett chuckled softly, shook his head. “No, girl, you got me all wrong,” he said. “That might not look that way to you now, but this place is a vital part of his history. You could say that this is where it all began.”

He undid his seatbelt, opened the car door and hefted himself out. Vicious pains jabbed at his kneecaps as he rose to his
feet and for a second he had to steady himself on the side of the car so as not to let his discomfort show.
Bastard old body
, Rivett cursed inwardly.
Don’t you let me down now
.

Francesca stepped out of the car, looking back towards the security guard, who had settled down into his chair and the sports pages of a tabloid. She locked the car, put the keys in her jacket pocket, where she could get to them quickly.

“This way,” said Rivett, putting his hand on her elbow and steering her towards the turnstiles. Francesca did her best not to wince at his touch, kept her fingers curled around the keys. Beyond the one spotlight that illuminated the car park, rose the skeletal outline of the log flume, the curves and dips of the old wooden rollercoaster and the silent spheres of the stilled big wheel and the rock-a-plane. It suddenly made perfect sense to Francesca that these two men could be joined by this place of smoke and mirrors, this land of delusion and deception, lying silent and sinister without the coins of the tourists to work its fancy lights and cheap thrills.

At the door of the turnstile, Rivett rapidly keyed numbers into a pad and turned the handle. Stopped on the threshold and said: “I hear you done a pretty good job keeping the old
Mercury
afloat.”

“Did you?” Pat’s face flashed through Francesca’s mind. “From who?”

Rivett ignored the question. “I used to know Sid Hayles, way back when. He were a good friend of mine, as it goes. There were none of these, what d’you call them,
profiles
, all this social concern in his day. Now I know, times do change, as you already pointed out. But I reckon what your paper needs is a little sense of historical perspective.” He pushed the door open, made a sweeping gesture with his arm. “After you,” he said.

* * *

Sean put his arm around Noj’s shoulder, propelled her away from the steps of the Lodge, where he could see the man behind the desk reaching for the phone.

“Where do you think they’re going?” he asked, heading the pair of them back to his car.

Noj hurried round to the passenger side. “To DCI Smollet’s house,” she said, yanking the door open, sliding in and slamming it shut. “We should hurry.”

Sean put his key back in the ignition, then paused. “You seem very sure of yourself,” he said. “Why do you think they’re going there?”

Noj stared at him with incredulous eyes. But it seemed she was lost for an answer. Her mouth opened and closed as she bounced up and down on the seat, but no noise came out.

“Go on,” said Sean.

* * *

Gray sat down on the sofa, next to his wife.

“My old log book,” he said, “from 1984. You in’t supposed to keep them. But this is the only insurance I’ve got for you if something now happen to me.”

Sandra felt a rush of panic, scanned her husband’s face for traces of impending breakdown. But his eyes were sharp and focused.

He put his hand down over hers. “Sandra,” he said, “what you got to understand about Len Rivett is that he’s got this way about him, like he already knows what’s in your mind and you’re just doing yourself a favour unburdening yourself to him.” He shook his head, smiling ironically. “He’s almost like a priest.”

“What is it, love, what did you tell him?” Sandra’s hand balled into a fist.

Gray looked her straight in the eye. “The summer of 1973,” he said, “you might remember. There was this new bloke taking football with the cubs. Ron next door asked me about him. Bloke said he was a qualified PE teacher but Ron had a funny feeling about him, wanted to know if I could do any kind of check. So I done a bit of digging and sure enough, the bloke had been a teacher – until he got the sack and done five years for child molesting, somewhere over Coventry way.”

Sandra closed her eyes. Gray squeezed her hand tighter.

“Now, what I should have done,” he said, “was just told the scout leader and had him removed. But that didn’t sit right with me. He’d still be lurking about, wouldn’t he, and until I had proof he were up to his old tricks again, there weren’t much more I could do about it. Meanwhile, children were in danger. So I decided to take matters into my own hands. I nearly bloody killed him, love.”

Sandra’s eyes opened, glittering with tears.

“Len covered it all up for me,” said Gray. “After I told him why I done it, of course.”

Sandra saw her husband’s knuckles whiten around the book he was clutching.

“Got the whole lot out of me,” Gray went on. “About the home, my foster father and all. I mean, it weren’t something I’d ever admitted to anyone before, except you.” He paused. “He never mentioned it again, or even alluded to it. Until Corrine Woodrow.”

“And then last night,” Sandra deduced.

Gray nodded. “But this,” he slapped the cover of his log
book, “has got a few facts about my side of the investigation he won’t want coming to light.”

“But I thought you weren’t in on the official investigation?” she said.

“I weren’t,” nodded Gray. “This is what I found out for myself.”

* * *

“This place,” said Rivett, opening his arms as the door to the inner sanctum shut behind them, “used to belong to a man called Eric Hoyle. A great man.”

“Another good friend of yours?” said Francesca, trying to place where she had heard the name before. An image of her parents flashed into her mind. Huddled over the kitchen table together, talking in whispers.

“That’s right,” said Rivett, catching hold of her elbow again and steering her towards a row of sideshows, all locked and boarded up now, but their garish hoardings still in place. “And this one,” he pointed towards the letters that proclaimed
Magic Darts
, “was where it all began for the young Dale Smollet. His Uncle Ted run the concession, still do, in fact, despite the fact he’s pushing seventy. They do say the carnival get in your blood, you never want to leave it, no matter how old you get. Retirement in’t an option. Don’t suppose men like Ted can afford it to be.”

Francesca eyed the plastic depiction of a dartboard and arrows, surrounded by stars, her mind conjuring back the photograph she had shown to Sean in the newsroom, those old men with all their secrets.

“Men like you, too, Mr Rivett,” she said. “I don’t get the feeling you ever really retired.”

“I can see why you became a journalist,” said Rivett. “What I don’t understand, though, is why you come here in the first place. You had a good job in London, I hear, on one of them daily papers. What would a bright, and if you don’t mind me saying, attractive woman like you want to jack that in for, come and work in a sleepy old town like this?”

“I like a challenge,” said Francesca, smiling. “Like yourself, I should imagine. Was Dale Smollet your challenge, Mr Rivett? Did you help him on his way from the funfair to detective chief inspector?”

Rivett shifted back and forth between his toes and his heels, hoping that this would keep the circulation flowing, the pain at bay.

“I see the potential in everyone, Miss Ryman,” he said. “That’s why I make such a good detective. In many ways, our jobs are similar, in’t they? We gather up all the knowledge of how everything work round here and then, that’s up to us to project an orderly, respectable image of the town. If we don’t, that’s bad for business. And we can’t have that, can we?”

The smile faded from Francesca’s lips.

* * *

“Smollet,” Noj eventually spluttered, “and Rivett are in this together. They always have been.”

“In what together?” said Sean. Earlier events replayed themselves in his mind. The phone call Smollet had taken in his office, his rapid, flustered exit – it did fit into the timeframe of Francesca’s supposed interview. And if Rivett had been there to intercept her, it was perfectly possible they were rendezvousing now.

“Setting up Corrine!” Noj wailed. “She was the scapegoat!
And if you don’t get after them now, not only is your friend going to be the next one, but the person you’re really after is going to get away.”

“The person I’m really after?” Sean looked at the strange creature beside him, whom he had known for mere hours. Thought about the matching DNA, sure in his bones that it wouldn’t belong to this biker, that Rivett was pulling some other sleight of hand with him. Making another scapegoat. But to believe that was to trust that Noj wasn’t just some vindictive fantasist looking to settle a twenty-year-old grudge, that she really could lead him to the culprit’s door. However unlikely it seemed.

“OK,” he reached into his jacket pocket for the other clean swab kit, “just to prove we’re on the level, I want you to do one thing for me. It will take one second, then we can go.”

* * *

“That’s getting a bit chilly out here, in’t it?” said Rivett. “Let’s go and wait for him in the office. He said he’d call us there when he’s on his way.”

He stopped by the door to the tower, keyed in some more numbers and opened it up. Striplights illuminated a red-carpeted lobby, a metallic wall with a lift set into it.

“To the penthouse suite,” said Rivett, “… where all the secrets are kept.”

36
The Sky’s Gone Out
June 1984

“Corrine? Is anything the matter?”

Lizzy’s voice filtered through Corrine’s synapses some moments after the head stylist had spoken. She turned around slowly, not wanting the book to slip out of her sight.

“Is it all right to go outside a minute?” she said, putting her hand up over her brow. “I just come over a bit funny, like I’m gonna faint or something.”

Lizzy frowned, following Corrine’s gaze to the figure standing outside. Samantha shifted, turned away, as if she knew she was being observed, but not before Lizzy recognised her as the girl who she had styled to look like Corrine earlier in the spring. Something strange had been going on between those two then – and if she wasn’t mistaken, still was.

Lizzy was very fond of Corrine, but she didn’t like being lied to. “Two minutes,” she said. “And make sure your friend is gone by then.”

Corrine went bright red, almost falling over her broom to get out of the room fast enough. Outside, on the other side of the road, Samantha started to walk away.

“Sam, stop!” Corrine yelled, loud enough for everyone in
the salon to hear her, launching herself across the road.

Samantha wheeled round, her eyes dancing with malice as she held out the book.

“Give that back, Sam,” said Corrine, tears of frustration welling up in her eyes. “You in’t got no right to it, that in’t even mine.”

Samantha ducked away from her, turning in a circle around her. “Why?” she said. “What’s so special about it?”

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